Ladyhawk
New member
- Apr 30, 2017
- 489
- 18
- Parrots
- Kizzy - (most likely) female blue-fronted Amazon, hatched on May 1, 2017; Gabby - Male double yellowheaded Amazon, hatched, April 1, 1986; died February 22, 2017
It's been a very long time since I had to deal with a bird pushing the limits and this is the first bird I've worked with who was fully flighted.
Over twenty years ago, I met Sally Blanchard and played with her black-headed caique, Spike. I still have a feather he moulted. I read every article Sally Blanchard wrote for Bird Talk magazine and subscribed to her newsletter for a time. I do not have her book.
I have two different editions of Mattie Sue Athan's book, but I haven't read it in quite some time. I remember applying what worked with certain parrots and discarding the rest, as needed.
I'm in the middle of reading the Parrot Wizard's Guide to a Well-Behaved Parrot. I decided the clicker was completely unnecessary and right now I'm not terribly keen on his idea of limiting food intake. Kizzy is much more cooperative and gentle when her crop is full. Also, he makes a ridiculous claim: Bird-proofing your house for a clipped parrot is just as hard as it is for a flighted parrot. Baloney. This isn't a comment on the clipped vs. non-clipped debate. It's just an observation that anyone should be able to make, probably a "talking point" regurgitated without actually thinking things through. I never had to hang streamers around a ceiling fan when I had clipped parrots. Nor did I have to keep a constant monitor Gabby's movements. Kizzy, on the other hand, can get herself into trouble very quickly with a few flaps of her wings.
I used to use "a bitten hand is an unsteady hand," and it worked with 85% of parrots, including my own Amazon parrot Gabby. Now it seems to have fallen out of favor with a lot of people. It's so ingrained in me that I can't help jerking my hand when too much bite force is applied. It's too early to tell if this will work or simply anger the flying toddler. It once failed miserably when I tried to use it with a scarlet macaw. Long story short: Ignoring the bird worked and after we kissed and made up, she never bit me again.
I may have already made a mistake by letting Kizzy roughhouse with toys while I'm holding her. She wants to play and it has been very hard to resist joining her. Unfortunately, she gets too worked up and can't resist biting a finger instead of toys. I don't recall ever roughhousing with Gabby. I'm not sure if it's because he got too worked up and bit me or if it was because the literature said it was not a good idea. Either way, he could entertain himself and I'm not sure Kizzy is quite there yet. Gabby was roughly the age Kizzy is now when I adopted him.
I respect the people here. Understand I have forgotten a lot of what I learned and that some of what I learned may be hogwash, anyway. With time, protocols change, as well they should as new information becomes available. Also, a flighted Amazon is a completely new dynamic for me.
Part of the problem is I'm so busy trying to work with her on socialization, harness training and target training, I literally don't have a lot of time for reading, so I'd like to know which sources would be the most helpful.
Thanks in advance.
Over twenty years ago, I met Sally Blanchard and played with her black-headed caique, Spike. I still have a feather he moulted. I read every article Sally Blanchard wrote for Bird Talk magazine and subscribed to her newsletter for a time. I do not have her book.
I have two different editions of Mattie Sue Athan's book, but I haven't read it in quite some time. I remember applying what worked with certain parrots and discarding the rest, as needed.
I'm in the middle of reading the Parrot Wizard's Guide to a Well-Behaved Parrot. I decided the clicker was completely unnecessary and right now I'm not terribly keen on his idea of limiting food intake. Kizzy is much more cooperative and gentle when her crop is full. Also, he makes a ridiculous claim: Bird-proofing your house for a clipped parrot is just as hard as it is for a flighted parrot. Baloney. This isn't a comment on the clipped vs. non-clipped debate. It's just an observation that anyone should be able to make, probably a "talking point" regurgitated without actually thinking things through. I never had to hang streamers around a ceiling fan when I had clipped parrots. Nor did I have to keep a constant monitor Gabby's movements. Kizzy, on the other hand, can get herself into trouble very quickly with a few flaps of her wings.
I used to use "a bitten hand is an unsteady hand," and it worked with 85% of parrots, including my own Amazon parrot Gabby. Now it seems to have fallen out of favor with a lot of people. It's so ingrained in me that I can't help jerking my hand when too much bite force is applied. It's too early to tell if this will work or simply anger the flying toddler. It once failed miserably when I tried to use it with a scarlet macaw. Long story short: Ignoring the bird worked and after we kissed and made up, she never bit me again.
I may have already made a mistake by letting Kizzy roughhouse with toys while I'm holding her. She wants to play and it has been very hard to resist joining her. Unfortunately, she gets too worked up and can't resist biting a finger instead of toys. I don't recall ever roughhousing with Gabby. I'm not sure if it's because he got too worked up and bit me or if it was because the literature said it was not a good idea. Either way, he could entertain himself and I'm not sure Kizzy is quite there yet. Gabby was roughly the age Kizzy is now when I adopted him.
I respect the people here. Understand I have forgotten a lot of what I learned and that some of what I learned may be hogwash, anyway. With time, protocols change, as well they should as new information becomes available. Also, a flighted Amazon is a completely new dynamic for me.
Part of the problem is I'm so busy trying to work with her on socialization, harness training and target training, I literally don't have a lot of time for reading, so I'd like to know which sources would be the most helpful.
Thanks in advance.