
Thursday, May 7, 2026· By Omar
Number One Always Knew the Way Back
She had been free on the hillside for weeks when the blue-and-yellow macaw wearing medallion number 1 made a decision no one had asked of her: to return. Not to captivity, but to the place her memory held most powerfully — the small patch of forest where she had spent months alongside her aviary companions before being released. Omar Enrique Berdugo Cabeza was near aviario #4 when he saw her emerge through the vegetation, that turquoise blue and golden yellow unmistakable against anything, and he watched her do something no rehabilitation protocol could have anticipated: she tried to go back inside.
She did it out of neither fear nor hunger — the photographs show her perched calmly in her usual spot, eating papaya and watermelon with the unhurried ease of someone returning home after a long journey. She did it because *Ara ararauna*, like so many creatures that have spent enough time in a place, develop a site memory that freedom alone cannot erase.
Since then, number 1 has shown no desire to leave. She remains there still, in that corner of the sanctuary where the tropical canopy closes in around aviario #4, reminding us that liberty and the pull of belonging are not always at odds.



