Hi everyone!
I have a Meyer's parrot, a female who is 4 years old. She has recently started to behave as if she wants to mate with me: she makes little noises, stands with her back towards me and lifts up her behind a little.
It has first happened about a moth ago, exactly at the same time as I've got a new job. Because of the job, I have to leave her alone with my husband for a large part of the week and he has to leave her alone for the large part of the day. We both love her very much, but she prefers me to my husband.
The problem is, I just cannot stand the thought of her being alone. She needs a friend of her own species, to share in all her activities and to be with her for the most of the day while I am at work. After all, they are social animals.
I don't want my birds to breed, so I have decided against a parrot of the same species. I don't want them to be too different, so I have decided to get another Poicephalus, a young Senegal male.
In the best case, they will bond, move to one cage and live happily ever after, or at least several years together. However, they might not even be friends, but even in this case my Mayer will still not be alone during the day. So I think I'm doing the right thing here.
So my first question is: is a Senegal really a good choice for a Meyer? How much is the character of a young bird set in its ways, anyway? Will it be able to adapt to my bird?
My second question: how do I introduce the new young Senegal male bird to my 4-year-old female Meyer so that they do not freak out and start fighting for territory right away?
I've arranged two separate cages on the same height level in the opposite corners of the room, approx 8 m. apart from each other. I don't let my Meyer to sit on this new cage and remove her every time she lands there. After the quarantine, I'll put the new bird in the new cage. But what do I do next?
I have a Meyer's parrot, a female who is 4 years old. She has recently started to behave as if she wants to mate with me: she makes little noises, stands with her back towards me and lifts up her behind a little.
It has first happened about a moth ago, exactly at the same time as I've got a new job. Because of the job, I have to leave her alone with my husband for a large part of the week and he has to leave her alone for the large part of the day. We both love her very much, but she prefers me to my husband.
The problem is, I just cannot stand the thought of her being alone. She needs a friend of her own species, to share in all her activities and to be with her for the most of the day while I am at work. After all, they are social animals.
I don't want my birds to breed, so I have decided against a parrot of the same species. I don't want them to be too different, so I have decided to get another Poicephalus, a young Senegal male.
In the best case, they will bond, move to one cage and live happily ever after, or at least several years together. However, they might not even be friends, but even in this case my Mayer will still not be alone during the day. So I think I'm doing the right thing here.
So my first question is: is a Senegal really a good choice for a Meyer? How much is the character of a young bird set in its ways, anyway? Will it be able to adapt to my bird?
My second question: how do I introduce the new young Senegal male bird to my 4-year-old female Meyer so that they do not freak out and start fighting for territory right away?
I've arranged two separate cages on the same height level in the opposite corners of the room, approx 8 m. apart from each other. I don't let my Meyer to sit on this new cage and remove her every time she lands there. After the quarantine, I'll put the new bird in the new cage. But what do I do next?