Friendly sun conure Clover missing in Austin, near William Cannon
Clover, a friendly sun conure, vanished from a sitter’s house near William Cannon and Brodie Lane, and her hand-tame behavior may help bring her home.

If a sun conure slips out during a sitter handoff, the first 24 hours matter most: search the immediate blocks on foot, call the bird with the same voices and flock sounds she knows, alert nearby neighbors fast, and check every door, window, and cage latch before the next routine move. Clover’s case in Austin shows why speed and a clear recovery plan can make the difference between a short scare and a long search.
Clover, a female sun conure, was last seen on May 30, 2026, after flying out of her sitter’s house while her owners were out of town. She is not near her home, which makes this more than a simple backyard escape. The missing-bird report places her near William Cannon and Brodie Lane in Austin and describes her as mostly yellow, with an orange and red head. For anyone scanning trees, fences, and rooftops in that area, Clover’s bright coloring should stand out quickly against the usual neighborhood traffic and greenery.
Her temperament gives searchers another useful clue. Clover is described as very friendly and willing to step up on fingers, and she especially loves fruits and walnuts. That kind of hand-tame bird may respond to a calm approach, familiar voices, and food she recognizes, even when she is frightened or disoriented. In a situation like this, a bird that normally comes willingly can still be cautious after a sudden flight, so every caller and searcher should move slowly and keep the contact gentle.
The broader lesson for parrot owners is that sitter handoffs need the same safety routine as any other departure. Door checks, window checks, cage security, and a clear emergency response plan should be in place before anyone leaves the house. Lost-bird alerts also work fastest when neighbors are brought in right away, with flyers and neighborhood posts circulating while the bird is still likely to be close by. Clover’s listing also drew Facebook community responses, a reminder that these searches can spread quickly when local bird people and neighbors are watching the same streets.
Clover was friendly enough to step up, but she still vanished in seconds when a door opened at the wrong moment. For a sun conure missing near William Cannon and Brodie Lane, that first day is all about quick eyes, familiar calls, and a tight handoff routine.
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