Sorry, my daughter just had surgery, I've been busy taking care of her for a couple days now. I managed to snap some photos last night. I wish I had taken some when the enclosure was all shiny and new. My girl is pretty much a destructo-queen, she can chew through almost anything it seems. We've had to replace some of her cool toys with some fudged homemade ones because she really knows how to go through the wood! As you can see in the photos, our toy making skills leave much to be desired. I recently joined a parrot toy-making facebook group to learn how to do it better. I tried to dye the wood blocks with food coloring but they turned out really weak.
Some information on what we used to build this:
When she first arrived she would not go lower to quick lock bowls to eat her food so we installed tall pvc bowl pedestals so her food and water would be near her. Those were not supposed to be in the design, it was only supposed to be manzanita climbing branches lower in the middle of the enclosure. We realized later we made the enclosure too tall and she refused to go lower for quite awhile. It's around 80 inches tall, and on wheels so it can be moved for cleaning around it. She likes it the way it is so I guess the pvc is staying. Kinda unattractive, but it is functional I guess. We added calcium, bee pollen, and cactus wood/clay perches for climbing/chewing on them. The food in the bowl is all she will eat right now, she refuses anything but dry goldenfeast blends/pellets and fresh fruits and veggies. The lowest pvc stand has her dry pellet mix in it. Middle perch water, tallest perch is her fresh food. So it works out well for her. The branches are arranged so she can safely climb from the floor on up to the ceiling in case she ends up down there. All exposed wood was tiled, the wood look you see on the sides is wood look floor tile. We installed the tile over the wood structure with good quality silicone caulking, which was dry and cured before she arrived so no fumes. Tile mortar doesn't stick to wood, it has to be silicone caulking like you use in a shower. I wanted to house her in something nice, big, and comfortable that would nicely contain the messes and be easy to clean. This thing is a breeze to clean, I can broom/dustpan the mess up and mop the floor with vinegar and water. It takes minutes to clean, really easy. The floor is vinyl flooring because the wood floor structure has a little give to it, so it couldn't be tiled. But it cleans so easy that I don't regret it. The mural has plexiglass over it. The hanging atom is made from pvc joints and ribbed blue piping from a home improvement store-really heavy duty and indestructible. I bought a kit ready made from a lady on etsy but it would be easy to find the parts at a home improvement store very inexpensively. It doesn't wear out like the rope ones do and can be cleaned in the shower. We also take it out and hang it outside the cage once in awhile for her to climb on and she really gets that thing swinging. It holds up like a tank and she loves it
Oh and the doors on the enclosure are standard vinyl screen doors that we took out the screen and installed plexiglass on them. Two doors that open like french doors and we lock it with a standard slide lock installed at the bottom of the doors. She can't get out at all because the lock is on the other side of plexiglass.