YmlyZHliaXJk
New member
- Aug 5, 2023
- 3
- 0
- Parrots
- conure, 8yo
I've been wondering this for years and finally, the time and situation lined up for me to ask it as I found this forum. I tried searching for posts similar to this but they are always about the opposite behavior. Anyway, the reason I'm making this post is out of curiosity.
I have a conure, and for as long as I can remember barring a few times when he was very young, he will never, ever, bite my face. If I really annoy him (like pushing him from tearing my shirt apart with my nose) he will push with his beak and maybe sometimes very lightly hold, but not even enough to where it leaves a mark or even hurts in the slightest bit (and it's completely warranted for using my face to push him - I don't do this normally but sometimes I'm working and my shirt is falling apart). On the contrary, he has no problem biting my fingers or my hands with a bit of force (even then, rarely ever enough to puncture the skin unless there's a stranger or dog coming near me that he's not comfortable with, then he'll really bite hard). With the face though, it's like he understands what it is and really understands that it's sensitive, as opposed to my hands - which I'm not sure if a) he doesn't fully understand they're part of the same body that my face is, or b) if he just sees them as legs, which I know parrots use to kind of wrestle around and fight each other with. I'm usually fairly skeptical about situations where an animal's implicit understanding of a very reasoning-based phenomenon is suggested, but this doesn't seem too far-fetched where it's implausible either.
Mostly just an observation which I'm curious if other people have also noticed or seen before. I can't say I'm overly effective at training or that I really did anything rigorous to train this into him either. I just try to give him the best most natural life that I can, plenty of socialization, toys, and I don't cage him or clip his wings (luckily he's small enough where this is actually feasible indoors), etc. and the rest has seemingly just come naturally thankfully.
I have a conure, and for as long as I can remember barring a few times when he was very young, he will never, ever, bite my face. If I really annoy him (like pushing him from tearing my shirt apart with my nose) he will push with his beak and maybe sometimes very lightly hold, but not even enough to where it leaves a mark or even hurts in the slightest bit (and it's completely warranted for using my face to push him - I don't do this normally but sometimes I'm working and my shirt is falling apart). On the contrary, he has no problem biting my fingers or my hands with a bit of force (even then, rarely ever enough to puncture the skin unless there's a stranger or dog coming near me that he's not comfortable with, then he'll really bite hard). With the face though, it's like he understands what it is and really understands that it's sensitive, as opposed to my hands - which I'm not sure if a) he doesn't fully understand they're part of the same body that my face is, or b) if he just sees them as legs, which I know parrots use to kind of wrestle around and fight each other with. I'm usually fairly skeptical about situations where an animal's implicit understanding of a very reasoning-based phenomenon is suggested, but this doesn't seem too far-fetched where it's implausible either.
Mostly just an observation which I'm curious if other people have also noticed or seen before. I can't say I'm overly effective at training or that I really did anything rigorous to train this into him either. I just try to give him the best most natural life that I can, plenty of socialization, toys, and I don't cage him or clip his wings (luckily he's small enough where this is actually feasible indoors), etc. and the rest has seemingly just come naturally thankfully.