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I won't say that all Greys act the same because they are individuals and I have never met any two of them that responded the same as another all of the time. There are a few things, however seem to be traits that most of them share. With only having the one Grey and knowing only a couple of others, I can only offer my observations on this and let you run with it as best as you can.
Greys are very loyal to their mate whether that mate is human or bird and does not seem to have any desire to socialize with anyone other than this mate. If for example my Lady wants to approach her, when she gets to a certain point the first thing that Kookooloo does is to turn her back to her, signifying that she doesn't want to talk to my Lady. If my Lady persists in her attempts to interact with her, Kookooloo will turn back around and bow her head as if she were asking for a head scratch and then when my Lady reaches for her she will grab her finger or hand and try to throw it away from her. The next attempt by my Lady is usually met with the same head bowing posture, but not always and then when my Lady tries to get closer to ask for step up Kookooloo will bite with no further warnings.
So you can say that the bird doesn't trust the person enough or you can say that the bird doesn't want any closer of a relationship than it already has, but the results are identical, if you persist you are very likely to get bitten. Since Greys are normally pretty much non aggressive, you may or may not be able to tolerate the bite and get the bird to do what you are asking, sometimes it will work for a while but usually ends up with a resentful bird and you lose any trust that you may have earned in just minutes and I know that my Grey has an excellent and long memory.
I am not trying to discourage you in any manner, but I guess that I am saying is that if you are going to be successful then expect it to be slow going and that you really can't push this bird into submission for any length of time or you will very quickly have a biter or possibly worse a bird that plucks its feathers. So again take your time and proceed only as far as your Grey permits and at the birds pace, or you will fail. Wishing you the best of luck as it sounds like she is a wonderful bird and that she could really use more interaction than she is receiving.


Pajarita wrote:I agree with Wolf (I had six greys and have two right now) and have just two things to add.
1) is that with the diet and light schedule you mentioned (non solar and super high in protein), you will never be successful in training her because you need high value food items as rewards and she is not only getting them all the time but an excess of them (please ask your mother to do a more thorough research on their diet because chicken, beef, etc are 100% no-nos for parrots, they all end up with high cholesterol and hepatic lipidosis).
2) is that, going by what you describe, she doesn't really 'trust' you, she good naturedly tolerates you. Greys are not really aggressive birds and are very tolerant so they don't go out of their way to bite and very, very often give you a couple of warnings (like Wolf's lady gets). If she trusted you, she would come to you on her own initiative because they do love been with people.



liz wrote:There is a lot wrong with her diet. She will develop liver disease if it continues. You are giving her too much protein and not enough veg and fruit.
I give mine 3 kinds of fruit and veg a day. If I don't have produce on hand I use frozen mixed veg. I give them a mixture of cooked grains.
They no longer get sunflower seed and only get almonds at bed time.
Do you give a kid unlimited junk food just because it is easier than fixing nutritious food?


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