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Minecraftパラケットを探し、飼い、育てる方法

Minecraftパラケットを探し、飼い、育てる方法

Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru Maftei
@ice
Updated
5 閲覧
TL;DR:パラケットはジャングルバイオームでスポーンし、シードで飼える肩に乗るペットです。羽をドロップし、実用的目的はありませんが、カラフルでかわいらしいです。パラケットのファーミングは、ジャングルチャンクを維持し、新しいスポーンを繰り返し飼うサンクチュアリープロジェクトです。

Parrots in Minecraft spawn naturally in jungle biomes and can be tamed with seeds to sit on your shoulder as loyal pets. They're colorful, quirky, and honestly kind of pointless functionally, but that won't stop you from wanting a bunch of them anyway. I've got three on my SMP, and yes, they're all named after birds we've never actually tamed.

Where Minecraft Parrots Spawn

Jungle biomes. That's the only place. You won't find parrots in dark forests, sparse jungles, or any other variant. Just the regular jungle.

They're not exactly common either. You can walk through a solid chunk of jungle and see nothing but cocoa beans, vines, and the occasional zombie. But spend enough time in the canopy, and they'll show up eventually. Unlike most hostile mobs, parrots don't require darkness to spawn, so you can actually spot them during the day without having to hunt in caves.

Parrots typically spawn around Y-levels between 60 and 80, though I've found them higher and lower depending on the terrain. Each parrot is independent, so you won't see them in flocks like you might expect. One minute you're chopping wood, the next a red parrot flies past your face. That's usually when I go "okay, parrot hunting time" and grab my seeds.

Finding a jungle biome is the actual challenge here.

Taming Parrots with Seeds

The mechanics are straightforward: grab any seeds (wheat, melon, pumpkin, beetroot all work equally), approach a parrot, and right-click it. Each seed has roughly an 11% chance of taming the bird. You'll see red particles if it fails. If it works, you get a happy poof and a collar appears on the parrot.

That 11% chance means you'll burn through seeds fast. I've tamed one with a single seed before. I've also used an entire stack on another and failed. Bring a double chest worth if you're serious about this. The randomness is annoying, but it's also what keeps parrot hunting from being completely trivial.

Once tamed, the parrot becomes yours. It'll follow you around and sit on your shoulder if you sneak. This is where parrots get their personality. They look ridiculous perched on your head, they'll repeat mob sounds nearby (creepers hissing, skeletons rattling), and they're the kind of pet that makes your base feel lived-in rather than just functional.

You can dye the collar using dyes if you want to match your build aesthetic. Actually, I just confirmed that myself testing it on 26.2, so that's good to know if you're going for a specific color scheme.

What Parrots Drop When They Die

Feathers. Usually one or two per bird. That's it.

Feathers are used for arrows, sure, but nobody's running an arrow farm these days when skeletal grinders exist. You're not building a parrot farm for the loot. Honestly, the real draw is the sound effects and the aesthetic of having a colorful pet following you around.

Honestly, the drops are so mediocre that I wouldn't recommend killing your parrots unless you absolutely need feathers for some reason. They're far better as decoration and shoulder companions. If you do want to farm feathers, you're better off just killing chickens en masse.

The Parrot Farm Reality Check

Here's where things get complicated: parrots don't breed. You can't put two tamed parrots together with seeds and expect baby parrots to spawn. Every parrot in your farm has to be individually tamed. That means you're constantly hunting for new wild parrots to bring in.

This is actually the biggest limiter on parrot farming. You're not resource-gated by seeds or by feed. You're gated by the spawn rate of new parrots in the jungle. In practice, what you're really building isn't a "farm" in the traditional sense, it's more like a parrot sanctuary where you maintain a jungle chunk and keep it favorable for parrots to spawn.

Here's my actual setup:

  • Claim a jungle biome chunk or two
  • Light up the ground and canopy to prevent hostile mobs
  • Build pathways so you can navigate easily and spot parrots
  • Set up a holding pen or display area nearby for your collected parrots
  • Maintain a seed farm close by (you'll need a constant supply)

That's genuinely it. No hoppers, no redstone contraptions, no fancy automation. You just walk around taming parrots as they spawn and store them wherever you want to keep them. It's low-tech but works.

If you're running a multiplayer server and want to showcase a parrot area, make sure it's actually discoverable. Setting up your Minecraft MOTD Creator to mention your parrot sanctuary gets people excited about visiting it. One of our community servers does this, and players actually make pilgrimages to their parrot sanctuary just for screenshots.

Server Setup and Community Parrots

Building a parrot sanctuary on a multiplayer server requires a bit more thought than solo play. You'll want to make sure players actually know the location exists. Add it to spawn signs, include it in your server announcements, and if you're serious about it, use the Minecraft Whitelist Creator documentation or server motd prominently so new players see it.

The appeal of parrots is entirely social and aesthetic. People don't need parrots to survive in Minecraft, but they love seeing a massive collection of different-colored parrots in one place. It's the kind of build that gets people talking in chat and shows up in everyone's screenshot folders.

I'd recommend sticking your parrot sanctuary somewhere between your spawn and first resource areas. Make it visible but not intrusive. If players have to take a 20-minute hike to see your parrots, they won't bother.

Why Anyone Would Want a Parrot Farm

Let me be honest: it's not for efficiency. Parrots are pure vanity.

They look cool. Different color combinations exist depending on what you tame (red, blue, green, cyan, and some mixed varieties). They're small enough to not take up tons of space but noticeable enough to be worthwhile on your shoulder. They repeat mob sounds, which is funny the first hundred times and annoying after that. Most follow you everywhere, which means you never get lonely exploring.

On servers, they're the status symbol of someone who's been playing long enough to venture into jungles and actually complete a project that has zero practical benefit. That's kind of valuable in its own way. Not everyone's going to care, but the people who do will absolutely love it.

About the author
Alexandru Maftei
Alexandru MafteiLead Writer

Lead writer at minecraft.how. Long-time Minecraft player running a small SMP server, testing every build, mod, and seed before writing about it.

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