Seems like most of what I've read about bringing home a new bird is basically to let them chill out for a few days and slowly let them get used to you before moving in closer etc. Is that right, even for a hand fed baby bird? I mean, he's already being handled at the store and I've had him perched on my hand so it's not like hands should freak him out when he comes home about 6 weeks from now.
I don't presume to know as much as experienced bird people, but it seems like if the bird doesn't know anything about what's normal or not, why start him off slowly? Wouldn't it be just as healthy to bring him home to a situation of "being played with and handled" as it would to "be in a cage all alone and we'll see about being friends later"? In the wild, I'd assume the flock does as it does, and the babies get used to that behavior from day one right? Why bring them in to one new arrangement and then work on changing it over time?
I certainly don't want to traumatize my baby by rushing things but I also don't want to teach him to be timid or shy in his new home. Get in there birdy and mix it up with the fam, is what I'm thinking...
I don't presume to know as much as experienced bird people, but it seems like if the bird doesn't know anything about what's normal or not, why start him off slowly? Wouldn't it be just as healthy to bring him home to a situation of "being played with and handled" as it would to "be in a cage all alone and we'll see about being friends later"? In the wild, I'd assume the flock does as it does, and the babies get used to that behavior from day one right? Why bring them in to one new arrangement and then work on changing it over time?
I certainly don't want to traumatize my baby by rushing things but I also don't want to teach him to be timid or shy in his new home. Get in there birdy and mix it up with the fam, is what I'm thinking...