Birdman666
Well-known member
- Sep 18, 2013
- 9,904
- 264
- Parrots
- Presently have six Greenwing Macaw (17 yo), Red Fronted Macaw (12 yo), Red Lored Amazon (17 y.o.), Lilac Crowned Amazon (about 43 y.o.) and a Congo African Grey (11 y.o.)
Panama Amazon (1 Y.O.)
And last night he was asserting himself a lot more now that he is no longer too weak to fight back. He is definitely bite pressure trained, but now he is demonstrating that CAG opinionated side.
I watched the first half of the game with that bird on my shoulder, and Tusk and Lila on my arm. He is a head tucked under the chin bird... so he sat there quietly and stretched his neck out under my chin for an extended head scratch.
I left cage doors open last night. This morning when I got up, he immediately flew to the kitchen and asked to be picked up. He helped me make coffee and sat on my shoulder as I did my "morning greeting" with all the other birds...
He seems to be making a remarkable recovery for a bird that was skin and bones... he's still underweight, but he eats well.
Then I started making breakfast for the fids... he was very good at first, until he figured out that it wasn't his breakfast I was making, and then he asserted his displeasure, pinching my cheek with his beak. (Gently. He is bite pressure trained, he was just getting my attention - I want some of that too!)
Tusk is still very quiet. He hasn't spoken much since he got home. He is very clingy with both Lila and me... You can tell this was very, very traumatic for him. He was actually getting fat when I lost him. Now he's a little underweight.
Lila bounces back and forth between both grays. She was housed with a CAG for around 20 years, so she considers every CAG her buddy bird...
Tusk doesn't know quite what to make of the new bird yet... "What, I'm gone a week and you replace me?!" "Dammit that's cold!"
Actually, neither bird is talking much, though I know for a fact that both of them do.
I watched the first half of the game with that bird on my shoulder, and Tusk and Lila on my arm. He is a head tucked under the chin bird... so he sat there quietly and stretched his neck out under my chin for an extended head scratch.
I left cage doors open last night. This morning when I got up, he immediately flew to the kitchen and asked to be picked up. He helped me make coffee and sat on my shoulder as I did my "morning greeting" with all the other birds...
He seems to be making a remarkable recovery for a bird that was skin and bones... he's still underweight, but he eats well.
Then I started making breakfast for the fids... he was very good at first, until he figured out that it wasn't his breakfast I was making, and then he asserted his displeasure, pinching my cheek with his beak. (Gently. He is bite pressure trained, he was just getting my attention - I want some of that too!)
Tusk is still very quiet. He hasn't spoken much since he got home. He is very clingy with both Lila and me... You can tell this was very, very traumatic for him. He was actually getting fat when I lost him. Now he's a little underweight.
Lila bounces back and forth between both grays. She was housed with a CAG for around 20 years, so she considers every CAG her buddy bird...
Tusk doesn't know quite what to make of the new bird yet... "What, I'm gone a week and you replace me?!" "Dammit that's cold!"
Actually, neither bird is talking much, though I know for a fact that both of them do.
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