Skip to main content

Tag: parrots

Bradenton Beach resident prepared after 2024 storms

Bradenton Beach resident prepared after 2024 storms

BRADENTON BEACH – Thirty two-year Gulf Drive resident Lynne Budzinski did not leave her home during the 2024 hurricanes, but this year she is well-prepared to do so if necessary.

Budzinski, who has five parrots at her home, has their transport cages ready to go in the event of a future evacuation.

“Here’s something people need to think about. Evacuating for a storm is not going to visit friends for a day or two,” Budzinski said. “You go because you think you may have nothing left when you come back. If you think you won’t have anything left, you have to take what you need to get by for at least a month or so. For them (the parrots) that means the big cages.”

Bradenton Beach resident prepared after 2024 storms
Lynne Budzinski’s parrots will go with her if she evacuates for a hurricane. – Leslie Lake | Sun

She said she began getting ready in August, by constructing smaller hurricane transport cages. The larger cages will be disassembled for trans­port and then reassembled.

“So, once they go in those little cages I have to come in here and take these apart and they have to go out also, that’s a day,” Budzinski said. “I have a place in town I can go. It would be me and five birds. I can’t take the larger birds in their big cages. If a storm comes, I have to clear my van out to get the birds and their cages in there.”

“I can do an evacuation by myself,” she said. “You have four or five days max to get it all done.”

Reflections on 2024 storms

“You know how they say the sound of running water is soothing? Not when it’s going by your window,” she said.

Budzinski said water was at her door during Hurricane Helene, but never came into the house.

“There was one point about 10 o’clock I asked myself, ‘Have I made a horrible mistake by staying?’ ” she said.

“I came out the next morning, I had two cars sitting here and they both started,” she said. “Everything had this slick sort of slime. It was so slippery. It was like walking on greased glass.”

With declining water pressure, Budzinski said she spent the first day after the storm hosing her yard down.

She said the sand in the alley behind her house was about 2 feet high, and she dug a ramp to get the cars up and cleared the entry.

“Mother nature dumped a sand bar on us,” she said.

Budzinski opened an accessory apartment in her home to friends who were unable to remain in their homes.

She said her asthma symptoms became worse following the hurricanes.

“It got to where I couldn’t… it was so hard for me to walk around my house without resting,” she said. “This was due to the stress.”

Preparing for future storms

“Unless they’re predicting a direct hit, I won’t be leaving,” she said. If it’s coming up the coast, I’m not going to bother.”

She has 12 2-liter bottles filled with ice, so as they melt, they can be used as drinking water.

Her storm shutters are ready on the ground next to the building.

She is prepared for power outages.

“In that situation if your power goes out and you have a lantern, get a big piece of white paper and hold it behind it, as a reflector,” Budzinski said. “You can light an entire room off of one lantern.”

The birds are back in town

The birds are back in town

HOLMES BEACH – The parrots that live at the Sun and Surf Beach Shop, 5418 Marina Drive, are back at their familiar perch.

On Oct. 7, two days before Hurricane Milton struck, the parrots were relocated to the Birds of Paradise sanctuary in Bradenton founded and operated by Debbie Huckaby. That ordeal required five vehicles, numerous dog crates and a U-Haul truck to transport the large parrot cages that are once again wheeled back inside the store each night.

The birds are back in town
On Oct. 7, the Sun and Surf parrots were evacuated before Hurricane Milton arrived. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

On March 8, the parrots spent their first day outside the store again. A visit to Sun and Surf on March 11 found store owner Jennifer Moore feeding and caring for her avian friends while waiting for her business in Holmes Beach to reopen, which she expects to happen very soon.

The birds are back in town
The parrots have been part of the Sun and Surf business for 30 years. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

After expressing her thanks for Huckaby and the Birds of Paradise sanctuary, Moore said,

“The birds are back. They don’t like change and they’re so happy to be back in their home environment. They missed the sunshine and salt air. They definitely missed our customers and we’re looking forward to our customers coming back soon.”

The birds are back in town
Congo is a cross between a green-winged macaw and a scarlet macaw. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

The parrots have been part of the Sun and Surf  business operations in The Island Shopping Center for 30 years. Moore’s step-dad, Marty Duytschaver, founded the store in 1983.

Duytschaver and Moore’s mom, Heather, shared a love for parrots that eventually became part of the Sun and Surf business model for the store that sells clothing, shoes, swimwear, accessories, beach supplies, souvenirs and more. The Sun and Surf website touts the business as “The Store with the Birds.” Marty and Heather are now retired and live in Michigan.

The birds are back in town
The parrot cages are wheeled inside the store at night. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

“My parents, the original owners, would rescue them and adopt them out,” Moore said. “I came in when I was 11 and I’ve taken over the store.”

The birds are back in town
Sun and Surf owner Jennifer Moore cares for the beloved mascots. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Regarding the current parrot population, Moore said, “They are not for sale. This is their forever home and these birds are our forever babies. They’re the mascots of the store and sort of an accidental attraction.

“Birdie is the oldest bird here. She’s in her 50s. We adopted her from a lady who had to go into a nursing home. She had her for 30 years and we’ve had her for something like 20 years now. She sings ‘Old McDonald had a Farm,’ she loves opera and she brings a lot of joy to the store. And Buddy is our greeter.

The birds are back in town
Birdie’s more than 50 years old and she’s still going strong. – Jennifer Moore | Submitted

“All these birds bring a lot of joy to people. They have their own little fan club and people look forward to seeing our birds every year. They sing songs with them, dance with them and the birds get socialization every day. It makes the store a little different than all the other stores on the Island. It’s something we’ve done for 30 years and the birds are part of the Island. They made their mark and it makes the Island even more special,” Moore said.

The birds are back in town
Yosemite Sam was hatched in 1995. – Joe Hendricks | Sun

Sun and Surf employee Lori Kee later said of the parrots’ return: “We’re very happy and that was an emotional day.”

Visit the Birds of Paradise sanctuary online at www.birdsofparadise.org.