MysticMagic
New member
- Jul 19, 2018
- 21
- 0
Also, I'd just like to add that it might be useful to put your bird's scream on command. I've seen it done in falconry a few times. Basically if the bird got lost, you could blow a whistle (or do something similar) and they'd scream back at you. I see no reason parrots couldn't do something similar. It's also supposed to lessen the frequency that birds of prey screamed, as you basically put that behavior on a command and never gave it at home, but I don't want to recommend it for that purpose. Especially since, with an animal that has a completely different mindset and a psychological need for their companion's attention, it could increase the instance of screaming behavior.
But it's not a difficult thing to teach, and could be useful for non-free flying birds that just happen to get lost. You blow a whistle, the bird screams back. Built in GPS.
But it's not a difficult thing to teach, and could be useful for non-free flying birds that just happen to get lost. You blow a whistle, the bird screams back. Built in GPS.