camo
New member
- Jun 30, 2014
- 383
- 0
- Parrots
- Gizmo - Male Eclectus Parrot
Pebbles - Female Eclectus Parrot
Hi all,
With Pebbles being (we have been told 3 years old, although I don't know if I can trust the sellers information), I was wondering how likely it is that she will begin to mimick human voices?
Of cause if she never does we wont mind, but every afternoon Gizmo goes through his vocabulary, and Pebbles joins in with her vocabulary of Eclectus noises (well at least some that we heard the Eclectus Parrots at the Australian Reptile Park also do), and possibly some she has learned from other birds, but she has never uttered anything that sounds remotely like a human word.
Obviously she is learning new commands like step up, and a hand is different from a perch (you shouldn't try to peel the bark off a hand), so it might be a dumb question, but I was wondering if teaching mimicking needs to be started at an early age, and she has missed out.
We have not focused on teaching Gizmo words, we have just said things too him, so I guess the second part to my question would be, if she can still learn to mimick, do we need to adopt any training techniques to help her learn, or just continue to do what we naturally do with both of them (which is just talk to them, our dogs can't mimick either, but that doesn't stop us talking to them).
Cheers,
Cameron
With Pebbles being (we have been told 3 years old, although I don't know if I can trust the sellers information), I was wondering how likely it is that she will begin to mimick human voices?
Of cause if she never does we wont mind, but every afternoon Gizmo goes through his vocabulary, and Pebbles joins in with her vocabulary of Eclectus noises (well at least some that we heard the Eclectus Parrots at the Australian Reptile Park also do), and possibly some she has learned from other birds, but she has never uttered anything that sounds remotely like a human word.
Obviously she is learning new commands like step up, and a hand is different from a perch (you shouldn't try to peel the bark off a hand), so it might be a dumb question, but I was wondering if teaching mimicking needs to be started at an early age, and she has missed out.
We have not focused on teaching Gizmo words, we have just said things too him, so I guess the second part to my question would be, if she can still learn to mimick, do we need to adopt any training techniques to help her learn, or just continue to do what we naturally do with both of them (which is just talk to them, our dogs can't mimick either, but that doesn't stop us talking to them).
Cheers,
Cameron