charmedbyekkie
New member
I used to think that what parrots say sometimes are a strange reflection of their environments. Any time my partner and I get into a disagreement, I move us into another room, away from Cairo or I put Cairo in his cage in another room. I also actively try to make sure people only speak to Cairo in a positive way (with the exception of "no bite/chew/go").
For me, I was delighted that, after "hello", his next word he learned was laughter. Cairo don't pick up words we actively try to teach him - he picks up whatever he wants. And I've been a bit sad that he started saying "Step Up" as a negative phrase from my partner (when Cairo bites my partner, my partner gets flustered and forgets protocol, which means he often shouts "ouch" then I remind him to say "no bite" and to put Cairo away for a few minutes time-out, which then means my partner tells Cairo to 'step up' to go to time-out.... trust me, I'm working on the partner bit, but he has a tricky relationship with Cairo).
Today, I saw this video on Facebook, and it really struck conflicting feelings in me.
https://www.facebook.com/LalyDu/posts/10216750644751645
For me, I was delighted that, after "hello", his next word he learned was laughter. Cairo don't pick up words we actively try to teach him - he picks up whatever he wants. And I've been a bit sad that he started saying "Step Up" as a negative phrase from my partner (when Cairo bites my partner, my partner gets flustered and forgets protocol, which means he often shouts "ouch" then I remind him to say "no bite" and to put Cairo away for a few minutes time-out, which then means my partner tells Cairo to 'step up' to go to time-out.... trust me, I'm working on the partner bit, but he has a tricky relationship with Cairo).
Today, I saw this video on Facebook, and it really struck conflicting feelings in me.
https://www.facebook.com/LalyDu/posts/10216750644751645