



liz wrote:Her bite is her only defence. As a baby she does not know what else to do when you do something wrong. You did something wrong.

simca357 wrote:liz wrote:Her bite is her only defence. As a baby she does not know what else to do when you do something wrong. You did something wrong.
yepps we were thinking on what we did wrong and couldnt find any clue, maybe she just wants some alone time



Pajarita wrote:Well, this is going to sound way too simplistic but the best thing you can do is not to do anything that would make the bird bite you. A baby that bites (a gray is very much still a baby at that age) is a baby that is not been understood because babies don't bite unless they are pushed into it.
You need to learn the bird's body language and respect its personal boundaries because both of you must have done something to trigger these bites.... especially since this is a baby and we cannot blame the previous owners or circumstances for making the bird a biter, right? Sometimes the reason is not obvious to us, we look at the situation and don't see us doing anything wrong but there is always something there.
I don't believe in the 'not reacting' crap that everybody talks about. It makes no sense. Birds in the wild would react if bitten with either flying away or retaliating so the 'no reaction' thing is not only completely unnatural from a behavioral point of view, it also tells the parrot that we don't feel any pain. Parrots are highly empathetic so not showing that we are hurt doesn't really do anything in terms of getting the bird not to bite you.
So tell us exactly what happened in a couple of occasions when you guys got bit, what diet, light schedule, one-on-one and out of cage time he has, what you usually do with it, etc.
For one thing, I can tell you that I don't agree with target training babies or training a bird that has not bonded with its human. I think both practices are completely counterproductive and that they do more harm than good in the long term. And I can also tell you that two weeks is not anywhere near enough for a bird to bond with a human. So, the very first thing I would do is stop all training (ladders are a flooding technique and should be stopped immediately but step up and step down is OK) and simply spend time with the baby cuddling and keeping it company, talking, singing, etc. Grays are high-strung but naturally sweet-tempered birds so it should be fairly easy to undo whatever is causing this baby to bite and get him to bond with your sister.

Wolf wrote:I can really only go by what I have read and what I have experienced with my own CAG who is about 15 years of age. I did not have her as a baby although I now wish that I had.
Any way it sounds to me that the first mistake has been in spending so much time on training rather with earning this birds trust and developing a bond with it first and then when this bird tried to say no, slow down she was ignored, this leaves her with no options other than to bite in order to get your attention. Now my bird will bite and she is quite capable of biting very hard, but more often than not she will just grab my finger or hand in her beak and move it aside, I listen to her when she does this, it certainly beats getting bitten.
Grey's are very intelligent birds and they are also very gentle most of the time and aggression is a means of last resort for them, until they have been taught by a human that they will not be listened to and that nothing that they( the bird) has to say is important enough to the human to listen to. This type of behavior by the human will without any doubt result in a Grey that will bite first and ask no questions later. Not very productive of a way to begin a long term relationship, if you ask me.
Start listening to this bird and start by not touching her unless she asks for it. Greys are not touchy, feely birds, so although they are very devoted and loyal and loving birds they do not like being petted or scratched unless they ask for it and then only for short periods of time, usually. Start learning to read this birds body language so that you can tell more of what it is trying to tell you and then listen to this. Above all else be honest in your relationship with this bird as it knows your moods almost before you do and you can't deceive it. Work on earning the birds trust as without this you have nothing and the relationship will deteriorate until you will not be able to handle the bird at all. Let go of any additional training until such time as you have earned this birds trust, you will know because most of the biting will stop on its own, but you need to stop when the bird asks you to. If it tries to avoid you it does not want to be on you. If the bird moves you finger or hand it is saying no it does not want you to do that to it at that time.



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