FYI: the petshop guy said hes about 2.5-3months old. He isnt tame yet and still gets nervous for some time when I sit next to his cage and talk (just walking to the far end of the perch and slightly nervous body language for a minute or 2)




pennyandrocky wrote:until you have him trained make feeding schedule around the time he needs to be caged and only feed in the cage. when i first adopted myashe hated her cage to the extreme that as soon as i closed the door she would violently pull her feathers out. so at bedtime i would put her favorite treat in her cage now she sees her cage as a happy safe place to go.




pennyandrocky wrote:he should figure it out right away. as long as no food/treats given until he's got the regular schedule. i'm a stay at home mom so i am able to allow mine out from 7am-7pm. at night at 7 mya flies back to her cage when i say bedtime and pennywhistles for me to pick him up to put him to bed he is flighted too but he likes me to kiss his back before bed. it may take a week or two just show him you're putting food and fresh water in his cage. if it's a work schedule do it maybe an hour or 2 before you have to leave so you're not in a rush.

Michael wrote:Ok, but if the bird is only a few months old, it's just a baby. Instead of withholding/scheduling food you must focus on offering as much food as possible. The bird should be tasting different foods, learning what treats it likes, and growing still.
Usually when the bird is that young (if it was properly raised) you should really be able to do most of what you want without clipping and without training. Hand raised baby parrots are very docile (Senegals very much so) and looking to humans for guidance. Although the bird is flight capable, it's probably not flight aware. It might not even know it can fly. It may not yet have had the experiences to fly. Also its wings are probably weak from not using them. So if you let it out and it flew around a little, it would get tired quickly and land some place. Then you could just pick it up.
Sometimes the bird is just fine but the owner is terribly inexperienced and can't read the bird to realize it's all alright. I do private consultation sessions over video skype and can help you figure out if the bird really is difficult or not and the best course of action. I'd say my typical training advice holds true for practically any parrot over 1 year old. However, with younger birds it depends more on their upbringing and the inexperience of the owner.
Oh and don't clip the wings! It won't make the bird one bit more tame! It's all about what you do and the relationship you build. Clipped or not the bird can love or hate you. It all comes down to how you treat it. And being the kinda person to want to limit its ability to fly isn't a good start.


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