Squeeing_Onion
Active member
- Oct 10, 2018
- 134
- 162
- Parrots
- "Bongo" - Green Cheek Conure
“Echo” - Indian Ringneck
"Chicken" - Sun Conure, rest in peace, my precious friend.
Heya!
I'll start things off with some cute photos of the two birds that have blessed my life:
"Chicken" - Estimated 17-18 years old when he passed on August 21st, 2018. I adopted him late August of 2015. He blessed my life in so many ways, and will always be dearly loved and missed.
"Bongo" - Adopted on October 8th, 2018
Fair warning: Try as I might, I just can't seem to pare down a forum post to be B R I E F. I highlighted the important questions I have in bold, everything else is mostly just excited parront chatter!
New the forums here, and new to owning a Green Cheek Conure!
Previously I cared for my late Sun Conure, Chicken - after his ear-splitting screeEEEES, I have to fight very hard not to laugh at Bongo's little squeaks. Her loudest call reminds me of a rubber chicken's squeak.
A bit of info on Bongo:
A disclaimer: Yes, I have done months and months of research on parrots, particularly on species-specific information for the ones I was interested in adopting, and the ones I ended up adopting. While adopting my first bird Chicken was technically an impulse-buy as far as making the final decision went (a long story I'll save for later!) it was backed by lots of research prior. And I am still researching! Always, always more to learn.
Avian knowledge is still growing and new discoveries are being made. The methods and techniques used even as little as twenty-thirty years ago have wildly changed and evolved to what we know today.
That said - My choices for caring for my birds have been based on continuous research, and I am always willing to consider making changes... if I feel there's enough substantial research backing it, and makes common sense.
TL;DR: I try to be very open minded. Some people prefer seed-based diets for the same species other people swear by pellet-based diets. Some preach for clipped wings, some preach for flighted. Different things work for different people and birds.
That said, please do not bash me if my opinions and choices differ from yours - be constructive, positive, and know I am always all-ears for new reading material, especially if it's got sources and citations! ;D
Also... Nope, I definitely don't pretend to be an expert! I'm just a bookwork who loves critters and wants to provide my adoptive family with the best care I can provide.
~~
I'm a personal fan of providing a primarily quality pelleted diet supplemented by vegetables, seed, and fruit.
That said, my first goal with Bongo is to get her on a much healthier diet! She's not yet been in for her first vet appointment, but she seems, to my eye, to be a little on the chubby side. I'll be digging out an electric scale eventually to test her weight, but I didn't want to scare or overwhelm her with too much happening in the first few weeks of her adjusting to a new home.
The same goes for her nails... They need a trim soon, more for my comfort than hers, admittedly. Those little claws are needle sharp! After Chicken, I've decided not to let anyone else trim my bird's nails. One too many experiences with vets or bird groomers lopping the claws off to terrible blunted nubs they couldn't climb with - or worse, cut into their quick! Ouch!
I just take the very teeny tips off with a nail clippers to keep them sharp enough they can climb and land safely, but not so needle-pointed they prickle my own skin.
I've made amazing and unexpected progress with Bongo, so far. I was not expecting to do much direct interaction with her for the first few days to a week, while she settled in, but Bongo changed those plans by insisting on it! So long as we're in her comfort zone and going at her pace, I figure we're doing A-ok with progress.
She steps up onto my hand without fuss unless she's on my shoulder, which takes a bit of convincing, but already she has improved from running back and forth to stepping up so long as I can get my hand right in front of her.
It has been quickly established that her favorite place to be is snuggled up to my neck.
Chicken was not a cuddly bird at all - it would not be inaccurate to describe him as a crotchety old man xD He would tolerate being pet on the head occasionally by me, and by my mother only after she gave him an almond, and liked to nap on my shoulder and be near me. I loved him dearly and he was a very strictly one-person bird, and I was totally fine with not having a cuddler.
So... Needless to say, I am a little drunk on the cuteness and novelty of feathery snuggles!
Should I have any concerns about her mistaking me for a potential mate with the contact? I only pet her head and touch her feet, though I wish to train her to accept being touched elsewhere for vet trips and harness training, if she'll allow it. She likes to snuggle up under my hair, so naturally that means it's draped over her back, and the side of my neck is against her wing.
She's also been nibbling on her veggies and pellets! Nothing totally eaten yet, but I consider it a major victory. I never was able to get Chicken to eat any vegetables. I tried everything from hiding it in his favorite foods to finely chopped up, or eating it myself to encourage him to want Mom's Food. (Chicken was 14-15 years old when I adopted him, compared to Bongo, who is still very young) I was ecstatic when I got him to eat orange bellpeppers. He adored them.
For one day, and one day only. After that, he'd fling them away or ignore them >.> Silly birds!
That said, I am hoping Bongo will be much easier to train to accept a wider variety of foods, as she is much younger.
I'm very comfortable at handling her and working with and around her. I live with my cousin, who is a little nervous around birds by nature of not being very familiar with them. I am nervous on training Bongo to be well socialized with other people, by nature of having little personal experience with it. Chicken was a decidedly one-person bird and after three years the most progress we made with other people, was he decided to allow my mother to soooometimes pet the top of his head after being given a treat, and he would let her pick him up if he found himself in an unhappy spot, and I was not immediately near him. He would also accept treats from anyone very politely.
For all others situations, he'd bite anyone who was not me. And - ouch! Boy, did he know how to bite. Right on the cuticles!
I get so worried that someone will get nipped by Bongo - and make a big reaction out of it that would encourage the behavior, and backfire. Any suggestions or advice on how to go about this in a safe way, for both Bongo, and the other humans involved? I know very few people who live near me who are familiar with birds.
There's several people at the rescue I work at, so that might be a weekly start, but I confess I'm a little nervous about bringing her into an environment filled with so many parrots who don't get quarantined. After Chicken's unexpected passing, I'm a little paranoid about possible disease transfer.
I'll start things off with some cute photos of the two birds that have blessed my life:
"Chicken" - Estimated 17-18 years old when he passed on August 21st, 2018. I adopted him late August of 2015. He blessed my life in so many ways, and will always be dearly loved and missed.
"Bongo" - Adopted on October 8th, 2018
Fair warning: Try as I might, I just can't seem to pare down a forum post to be B R I E F. I highlighted the important questions I have in bold, everything else is mostly just excited parront chatter!
New the forums here, and new to owning a Green Cheek Conure!
Previously I cared for my late Sun Conure, Chicken - after his ear-splitting screeEEEES, I have to fight very hard not to laugh at Bongo's little squeaks. Her loudest call reminds me of a rubber chicken's squeak.
A bit of info on Bongo:
- Adopted on Oct. 8th from a family who cared for her a lot, but a member of the household was very uncomfortable around birds, and so they rehomed her to me.
- 4 years old, and I have her breeder's certificate and original bill of sale as proof to back that up. Very strange for me, as my first parrot was a rescue bird from a shelter, and we only had the word of the previous owner to judge his age by!
- Fully flighted and as far as I know has never experienced her wings being clipped. She's not the most skilled of flyers yet, but she is very capable.
- Was fed on an all-seed diet and only occasionally (to my understanding) was offered fruit, and very rarely vegetables.
- Is entirely addicted to sunflower seeds.
- Her beak is very flaky, I suspect from poor nutrition or a dry household
- Is so far proving to be very friendly and curious!
- As I was expecting for such a young bird, she's very flighty when introduced to NEW and SCARY things.
A disclaimer: Yes, I have done months and months of research on parrots, particularly on species-specific information for the ones I was interested in adopting, and the ones I ended up adopting. While adopting my first bird Chicken was technically an impulse-buy as far as making the final decision went (a long story I'll save for later!) it was backed by lots of research prior. And I am still researching! Always, always more to learn.
Avian knowledge is still growing and new discoveries are being made. The methods and techniques used even as little as twenty-thirty years ago have wildly changed and evolved to what we know today.
That said - My choices for caring for my birds have been based on continuous research, and I am always willing to consider making changes... if I feel there's enough substantial research backing it, and makes common sense.
TL;DR: I try to be very open minded. Some people prefer seed-based diets for the same species other people swear by pellet-based diets. Some preach for clipped wings, some preach for flighted. Different things work for different people and birds.
That said, please do not bash me if my opinions and choices differ from yours - be constructive, positive, and know I am always all-ears for new reading material, especially if it's got sources and citations! ;D
Also... Nope, I definitely don't pretend to be an expert! I'm just a bookwork who loves critters and wants to provide my adoptive family with the best care I can provide.
~~
I'm a personal fan of providing a primarily quality pelleted diet supplemented by vegetables, seed, and fruit.
That said, my first goal with Bongo is to get her on a much healthier diet! She's not yet been in for her first vet appointment, but she seems, to my eye, to be a little on the chubby side. I'll be digging out an electric scale eventually to test her weight, but I didn't want to scare or overwhelm her with too much happening in the first few weeks of her adjusting to a new home.
The same goes for her nails... They need a trim soon, more for my comfort than hers, admittedly. Those little claws are needle sharp! After Chicken, I've decided not to let anyone else trim my bird's nails. One too many experiences with vets or bird groomers lopping the claws off to terrible blunted nubs they couldn't climb with - or worse, cut into their quick! Ouch!
I just take the very teeny tips off with a nail clippers to keep them sharp enough they can climb and land safely, but not so needle-pointed they prickle my own skin.
I've made amazing and unexpected progress with Bongo, so far. I was not expecting to do much direct interaction with her for the first few days to a week, while she settled in, but Bongo changed those plans by insisting on it! So long as we're in her comfort zone and going at her pace, I figure we're doing A-ok with progress.
She steps up onto my hand without fuss unless she's on my shoulder, which takes a bit of convincing, but already she has improved from running back and forth to stepping up so long as I can get my hand right in front of her.
It has been quickly established that her favorite place to be is snuggled up to my neck.
Chicken was not a cuddly bird at all - it would not be inaccurate to describe him as a crotchety old man xD He would tolerate being pet on the head occasionally by me, and by my mother only after she gave him an almond, and liked to nap on my shoulder and be near me. I loved him dearly and he was a very strictly one-person bird, and I was totally fine with not having a cuddler.
So... Needless to say, I am a little drunk on the cuteness and novelty of feathery snuggles!
Should I have any concerns about her mistaking me for a potential mate with the contact? I only pet her head and touch her feet, though I wish to train her to accept being touched elsewhere for vet trips and harness training, if she'll allow it. She likes to snuggle up under my hair, so naturally that means it's draped over her back, and the side of my neck is against her wing.
She's also been nibbling on her veggies and pellets! Nothing totally eaten yet, but I consider it a major victory. I never was able to get Chicken to eat any vegetables. I tried everything from hiding it in his favorite foods to finely chopped up, or eating it myself to encourage him to want Mom's Food. (Chicken was 14-15 years old when I adopted him, compared to Bongo, who is still very young) I was ecstatic when I got him to eat orange bellpeppers. He adored them.
For one day, and one day only. After that, he'd fling them away or ignore them >.> Silly birds!
That said, I am hoping Bongo will be much easier to train to accept a wider variety of foods, as she is much younger.
I'm very comfortable at handling her and working with and around her. I live with my cousin, who is a little nervous around birds by nature of not being very familiar with them. I am nervous on training Bongo to be well socialized with other people, by nature of having little personal experience with it. Chicken was a decidedly one-person bird and after three years the most progress we made with other people, was he decided to allow my mother to soooometimes pet the top of his head after being given a treat, and he would let her pick him up if he found himself in an unhappy spot, and I was not immediately near him. He would also accept treats from anyone very politely.
For all others situations, he'd bite anyone who was not me. And - ouch! Boy, did he know how to bite. Right on the cuticles!
I get so worried that someone will get nipped by Bongo - and make a big reaction out of it that would encourage the behavior, and backfire. Any suggestions or advice on how to go about this in a safe way, for both Bongo, and the other humans involved? I know very few people who live near me who are familiar with birds.
There's several people at the rescue I work at, so that might be a weekly start, but I confess I'm a little nervous about bringing her into an environment filled with so many parrots who don't get quarantined. After Chicken's unexpected passing, I'm a little paranoid about possible disease transfer.