by Eric&Rebecca » Thu Aug 29, 2013 7:48 am
Have you tried adjusting the position of yourself or your hand. Perhaps something about the hand disturbs him. For example, my parrotlet will only step on the back of a flat hand and will bite hard on a finger. Also bear in mind your body language when approaching the bird are you standing, higher, lower, sitting.... all of these could be a reason/something he doesn't like. Again you have to remember you are asking him to do something, for example your happy to jump into a swimming pool right? But if I said you had to jump into a swimming pool from a cliff would you be so accepting?- this situation is what your bird is going through, something about the way you are approaching him to step up is like asking him to jump into a swimming pool from a cliff. My parrotlet is still a bit off with stepping but we will get there. 1.5 months isn't that long considering that background the animal. If you're still having the problem in 6-8 months maybe consider there's another issue here but in the meantime just be patient and listen to advice given
To the clipping question by the other poster:
Clipping your bird just forces your bird to accept you because they can't fly away- that's no way to build a bond with a bird. Would you kneecap a small child to stop them from running away? Or change something fundamental about their nature just so they will do something correctly?- No, so why do it to a bird? Birds are flying things and should be able to fly. I don't see how that is an argument that doesn't hold water, that's changing nature, you might as well cut a cat's leg off to stop it running away.
The whole 'my bird will break its neck if its not clipped' theory is not entirely true, there is again research on this about how there's a chance of about 1% of this happening and a much greater chance of the bird hurting itself BECAUSE it's clipped in the first place either by self mutilation, keel bone injuries or not being able to get away from dangerous situations, often resulting in fatalities. It's the owners job to ensure the safety of the bird not the owner to clip the wings to have less to worry about.
So many psychological problems occur from clipped birds, this is printed is perfectly objective articles to people who aren't anti clip or pro clip so there's no ambiguity there. It proves how far more birds develop psychological problems from being clipped, particularly Greys, cockatoos and cockatiels.
I just cannot and never will understand clipping as a method of taming. The only time I would ever lightly (NOT FULLY) clip my bird is if they had a health issue that prevents them from flying safely much the same as I would put a human in a wheelchair if they had difficulty walking. When considering clipping think would you remove a leg from a dog, cut your own child's tendons... then why clip a birds wings?