


he acts likes hes been outside before lolWolf wrote:I was not speaking of what you were or were not feeding your birds, so I think that you misunderstood me. Not a biggie as it is normal that things written can be misunderstood pretty easily when you are new to each other. Most birds do tend to get nervous when they are in a new situation and this is more pronounced with cockatiels, but you may have the exceptional bird, I don't know.


ParrotsForLife wrote:Lots of birds bite at the harness they get used to it and then they stop I just went outside with Rocko he wasnt biting that much and the spray is johnsons anti-pek pump spray johnsons has lots of bird stuff and i said i have a cockatiel not a chicken


Pajarita wrote:Sunshine is good for birds, of course, but stress is not so one needs to balance things out a bit. And there is no way on this green earth that anybody can tell if a bird is stressed out or not - not behaviorists, not avian vets, not anybody for the simple reason that they all react differently to stress and none of them reacts the way mammals do so we have no point of reference. There is a single way to tell and that is to measure corticol levels but you can't draw blood without stressing out the bird so the test is useless as you would ALWAYS get elevated values regardless. The other ways are indirect. A bird that lives under constant or often stress will have shorter telomeres (and we have a study done on African grays that tells us the birds that are single birds have shorter ones so no, no single bird, including a tiel, does 'fine' on its own regardless of what people want to believe and say) and a depressed immune system (birds would develop diseases that are happen when the immune system is not working right -like aspergillosis or clostridium, for example).


Pajarita wrote:ParrotsForLife wrote:Lots of birds bite at the harness they get used to it and then they stop I just went outside with Rocko he wasnt biting that much and the spray is johnsons anti-pek pump spray johnsons has lots of bird stuff and i said i have a cockatiel not a chicken
Johnson's Anti pek spray was made for chickens and just relabeled for pet birds. I looked and looked and could not find the ingredients anywhere. Do you have a bottle of it? If so, could you please list the ingredients so we can check them out. The pet industry is unregulated and often sells products that are not safe for birds.
It's not a matter of whether birds get used to the harness and stop biting it, It's a matter of the particular species of parrot, their size and how they fly and maneuver and the inherent risks flying one with harness might bring. Parrots might all be parrots but they are all completely different species and what you can do with one, you can't with another.



Cage Cleaner wrote:Can you send a picture of the harness on the parrot? It sounds like you bought the wrong size, or that you aren't pulling the wings through, etc.
Aviator harness is the best, with the best customer service. It would be worth contacting the manufacturer, too. They were helpful when I was first acclimating my parrot to the harness.
As for biting the harness, it's useful to just use the distraction method. Whenever the bird starts to chew, just get its attention onto something else. Going outside works well for this since there are a lot of novelties.


ParrotsForLife wrote:Pajarita wrote:Sunshine is good for birds, of course, but stress is not so one needs to balance things out a bit. And there is no way on this green earth that anybody can tell if a bird is stressed out or not - not behaviorists, not avian vets, not anybody for the simple reason that they all react differently to stress and none of them reacts the way mammals do so we have no point of reference. There is a single way to tell and that is to measure corticol levels but you can't draw blood without stressing out the bird so the test is useless as you would ALWAYS get elevated values regardless. The other ways are indirect. A bird that lives under constant or often stress will have shorter telomeres (and we have a study done on African grays that tells us the birds that are single birds have shorter ones so no, no single bird, including a tiel, does 'fine' on its own regardless of what people want to believe and say) and a depressed immune system (birds would develop diseases that are happen when the immune system is not working right -like aspergillosis or clostridium, for example).
Your wrong about that lots of birds have lived on their own and have lived long healthy lifes I know for a fact Rocko dosent need another tiel he has me and im with him all the time and my African grey has been alone for 6 years and shes ok shes with my mam all the time and they both get attention all the time and not all birds enjoy another birds company many birds like being on their own they dont need a friend to live longer thats just plain silly and a bird cant get stressed if they like being outside seriously think before you post birds are supposed to be outside so why would they get stressed if they like it and there no dangerous predators where i live


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