Tux was raised at a pet shop, with his wings clipped. He was never taught how to fly. So I finally decided to gradually introduce him to the wonderful world of flying.
I searched online and got mixed results. The consensus seems to be older birds *usually* learn flying slower or not at all. Well I'm gonna give it a shot, hence this journal. The training is not complete but I'll keep updating this thread for archive and future bird owners with similar issues.
I'll start with the basic profile of Tux:
Profile:
- Species: Pineapple GCC
- Age: ~2 yrs
- Sex: Male (DNAed)
- Age since adoption: 1.5 yrs
- Heath: Good
- Starting condition: ZERO flying experience, NOT target trained, knows step up.
- Relationship with owner: very trusting
I believe a very strong bond with the owner and knowing step up are hard prerequisites for flight training.
Training Plan:
Stage 1: get Tux used to reaching treats/targets that he can't reach with his beak.
Stage 2: extend the target distance gradually so he has to flap his wings in the process. This lets him feel and understand the supporting force of flapping wings.
Stage 3: extend the target further such that some flying is actually required to reach the target.
Stage 4: apply flying to real world scenarios and basically teach Tux "I can go anywhere I want by flying"
April 28:
<Stage 1>
The first day of training. The goal is to teach him to jump up to my finger instead of stepping up. I held his favorite treats and sat him by the edge of the desk. Then I put my finger away from the edge at a distance just far enough that Tux can't reach with his beak. It took some patience and encouragements but he finally made his first jump. After that I immediately rewarded him with treats. I repeated the above a couple times and made sure he had a firm grasp of "jumping to my finger means treats".
April 29:
<Stage 1>
I extended the target distance a little bit and Tux was a bit scared. I had to alternate between closer and farther targets to get him to jump. But at the end of the training session he did flap his wings a few times. I don't think he is ready for Stage 2 yet as he still hesitates quite a bit.
April 30:
<Stage 2>
I extended the target distance further. Now he is much bolder and aggressive in reaching longer targets and can reach ~2-3x the distance we started with. The good news is flying/flapping wings is now consistently taking place. So yeah Tux officially progressed to Stage 2. That did not take near as long as I was expecting.
I also decided to start Stage 4 gradually. At the end of the training session, I tried holding his favorite toys and his treat jar while giving him no clear direction of "jump up" (without using my fingers for him to land on). Surprisingly he adapted quickly and flew to the top of the jar & his toys - admittedly with some hesitation but I'll take it.
To be continued...
I searched online and got mixed results. The consensus seems to be older birds *usually* learn flying slower or not at all. Well I'm gonna give it a shot, hence this journal. The training is not complete but I'll keep updating this thread for archive and future bird owners with similar issues.
I'll start with the basic profile of Tux:
Profile:
- Species: Pineapple GCC
- Age: ~2 yrs
- Sex: Male (DNAed)
- Age since adoption: 1.5 yrs
- Heath: Good
- Starting condition: ZERO flying experience, NOT target trained, knows step up.
- Relationship with owner: very trusting
I believe a very strong bond with the owner and knowing step up are hard prerequisites for flight training.
Training Plan:
Stage 1: get Tux used to reaching treats/targets that he can't reach with his beak.
Stage 2: extend the target distance gradually so he has to flap his wings in the process. This lets him feel and understand the supporting force of flapping wings.
Stage 3: extend the target further such that some flying is actually required to reach the target.
Stage 4: apply flying to real world scenarios and basically teach Tux "I can go anywhere I want by flying"
April 28:
<Stage 1>
The first day of training. The goal is to teach him to jump up to my finger instead of stepping up. I held his favorite treats and sat him by the edge of the desk. Then I put my finger away from the edge at a distance just far enough that Tux can't reach with his beak. It took some patience and encouragements but he finally made his first jump. After that I immediately rewarded him with treats. I repeated the above a couple times and made sure he had a firm grasp of "jumping to my finger means treats".
April 29:
<Stage 1>
I extended the target distance a little bit and Tux was a bit scared. I had to alternate between closer and farther targets to get him to jump. But at the end of the training session he did flap his wings a few times. I don't think he is ready for Stage 2 yet as he still hesitates quite a bit.
April 30:
<Stage 2>
I extended the target distance further. Now he is much bolder and aggressive in reaching longer targets and can reach ~2-3x the distance we started with. The good news is flying/flapping wings is now consistently taking place. So yeah Tux officially progressed to Stage 2. That did not take near as long as I was expecting.
I also decided to start Stage 4 gradually. At the end of the training session, I tried holding his favorite toys and his treat jar while giving him no clear direction of "jump up" (without using my fingers for him to land on). Surprisingly he adapted quickly and flew to the top of the jar & his toys - admittedly with some hesitation but I'll take it.
To be continued...
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