by Pajarita » Fri Sep 04, 2015 10:43 am
Well, Wolf is right but there are tricks. Like, for example, you need to stop free-feeding pellets because you need to establish what, exactly, is her highest-value food item. High value item is the one thing they cannot resist which is ALWAYS a high protein food so, when you free-feed high protein, you are not only not feeding right, you are also losing that very necessary training tool. So, start her on gloop, chop, mash or whatever you decide to feed her for breakfast and determine what is it that she loves best (I always recommend using nuts as in an almond sliver, for example). Once you do this, you can start training her.
For example, to train to recall. You sit to a table and put her as far as your arm would allow it and, holding the almond sliver in your hand (so she can see it) at the edge of the table, call her name and give the command (like: "Luna, come!"). She will walk the width or the length of the table to take it from your fingers and, as she is reaching for it, you praise, praise, praise ("Good girl, Luna! Good girl!) and give it to her. Do this three times in a row and no more. Then, later on, you do it again another three times and, when you see that she comes every single time without hesitating, you can start making the distance longer. I forget whether she can fly or not but, if she can, then you go into real flight recall by putting her on a perch and putting your hand with the almond just far enough she needs to jump to get to it. Once she is doing this consistently for a number of days, you start moving a bit away so she has to take a short flight. Then farther and farther... See what I mean? It's more a matter of consistency, persistence and finding the right reward than using a stick or a clicker.
She eats when you get home because birds eat when in flock and, most likely, she spends most of her day just perching there, doing nothing, waiting for company so she can feel safe enough to eat without worrying.