Cassandrum wrote:I say much because I swear Taz (Senegal) has super mood swings. Random times during the day, and during the week, he'll get super loud and screamy so I leave him in his cage and cover him up. That was a bit of a ramble, moving on...
It could be age specific or hormonal. The best we can do is try to even it out a bit by not making them over excited at times and neglected at others. I try to use a more balanced approach to spending time with them and other things like diet.
Cassandrum wrote:Lately when we play together, he's been biting my hands really hard to the point of taking chunks of skin off.
If this is happening in play it could be over excitement. Senegal Parrots especially, when they become too excited start to bite. It's like they just can't contain it. When you see eyes pinning, pouncing around, head bobbing, kind of super excited action, keep your hands away cause they just bite. This isn't even aggressive but just out of excitement. It's like the center for aggression and excitement comes from one place and over-excitement triggers the same response as aggression (including eye pinning, etc) even though it's from a "happy event."
Cassandrum wrote:Seriously, it doesn't hurt THAT bad, more of a surprise than anything, but I guess I just want to make sure I am not reinforcing that really hard nipping by ignoring it?
That is the point of ignoring. You CANNOT reinforce biting by ignoring it completely. The only reinforcing thing could be the chewiness of your skin if its done as a playful feeling of the skin like they would on a toy. But you know this is different than biting. This is more of the chewing on the finger nails, ripping pieces of loose skin off, etc and not snap biting. By saying "no" or giving other forms of attention (including putting away into cage), you are giving attention in some form without truly averse consequence and it could well be reinforcing. Other consequences are too severe and hurt your relationship. This is why rewarding good stuff and using training and ignoring bad stuff is the best long term approach.
Cassandrum wrote:I know that seems the consensus here, but I feel like the bites are are becoming more frequent and harder.
Think this over very very carefully and realize what you just said. This is the definition of positive reinforcement. Whatever you were doing in relation to the biting was positively reinforcing so he does it more now. It like when I get Kili to wave her foot more cause she gets treats for it, you taught your parrot to bite more cause it gets what it wants for it. I don't know what you're giving it (leaving it alone, talking, giving attention, putting it back into cage to eat/relax, whatever it is) but the parrot likes getting that and will push your "on button" by biting you to make you do it. THIS is why I tell people to ignore instead of doing anything so that they couldn't make this mistake.
Cassandrum wrote:Any other suggestions? He has tons of chew toys and foraging toys, just sometimes he seems more inclined to bite my hand than the toy/perch/stick that I'm playing with or training him with.
Ignore bite, positively reinforce desired behavior directly and indirectly, don't clip wings. Seriously, this is 95% of the solution.
Cassandrum wrote:Ooh, speaking of training, one more quick question: I just inherited Taz a couple months ago, and have been clicker training him for a couple weeks consistantly. Is it normal to have an ADD bird, so to speak? He doesn't seem to want to be trained for more than 10 minutes. After that, he flies back to his cage repeatedly if I try to do step ups or target training with him. And his training perches are in places with little distraction, he just flies away when HE'S done, not when I'M done.
No, that's totally normal. Most of em (especially the young ones) have a short attention span. Only after many months/years of training does their endurance increase and even then it's limited. Motivation is affected by hunger to an extent, but beyond that point it's just on how much they can handle. Keeping sessions short and frequent early on is most effective. 2-3 times a day for 10 minutes is fine.