Thousands of green parrots gathering at feeding stations on man's outdoor sanctuary property

Gujarat Man Feeds 10,000 Parrots Daily for 28 Years

🦸 Hero Alert

Harsukhbhai Vaghasia spends $2,400 annually to feed thousands of parrots that arrive at his doorstep each morning. What started with one millet cob on a balcony became a four-acre sanctuary for 10,000 birds.

Twenty-eight years ago, Harsukhbhai Vaghasia hung a single pearl millet cob outside his balcony while recovering from a broken leg. The next morning, one parrot showed up for breakfast.

Then two parrots came. Then four. Within a month, over 100 birds were waiting at his window in Keshod, Gujarat.

Most people would have stopped feeding them. Vaghasia built a bigger balcony.

When that wasn't enough, he repurposed old pipes and drilled holes to create custom feeding stands. The flock kept growing, so he did something extraordinary: he moved his entire home to the outskirts of town where the birds could have space and safety.

Today, his four-acre property welcomes 8,000 to 10,000 parrots every single day during monsoon season. For Vaghasia, it's just morning attendance.

Gujarat Man Feeds 10,000 Parrots Daily for 28 Years

He buys 330 kilograms of bajra and hornseed annually, spending between $1,800 and $2,400 from his own pocket. Every season, 1,000 to 1,500 new chicks join the crowd. He even commissioned a custom iron feeding structure worth $3,000 so the birds can land safely without fighting over food.

The commitment goes beyond money. Vaghasia wakes before dawn every day, regardless of weather or personal plans, because thousands of beaks depend on him.

Sunny's Take

What makes this story soar isn't the numbers or the award Vaghasia received from India's president in 2017. It's the origin: one man, one broken leg, one act of simple kindness that snowballed into a daily miracle.

He didn't set out to become the "Parrot Man of Gujarat." He just kept showing up. And 10,000 parrots kept showing up too, trusting him year after year.

In a world that often asks "what's in it for me," Vaghasia spent three decades answering "what can I give?"

His biggest honor isn't the Srishti Samman for Bird Conservation gathering dust somewhere. It's 10,000 wings arriving at his doorstep every morning, knowing breakfast will be waiting.

Based on reporting by The Better India

This story was written by BrightWire based on verified news reports.

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