CaitlinRice413 wrote:The only thing I could really think of is maybe just give Ollie the medicine he needs and leave it up to the vet to check him over. I don't know what his condition is or how necessary it is to weigh him and check around his body, so maybe that wouldn't be best. I guess if I imagine myself in the situation, I would probably just let him be around me out of the cage on a playstand or something, offer him the medicine, and try to sneakily visually inspect his body when he's stretching so I wouldn't have to touch him.
friend2parrots wrote:i agree with caitlin that i think it would be best to avoid touching him if at all possible. and also, if i were in your situation, i would just completely forget about any training for the moment, and not worry about maintaining tameness in any way. i would just allow him to become less tame, and work on rebuilding tameness later when hes better.
You're in a really tough situation, Marie, but I agree with Caitlin and friend2parrots in that you should avoid touching him if possible and not worry about maintaining tameness for now.
I have had a similar situation to yours (but the illness didn't go on as long). My brown-headed parrot was a rescue, age unknown when we adopted him (but the rescue "guessed he was about one"). He had a severe clip and was terrified of everything and would panic and fall to the floor like a rock constantly for no apparent reason, so he wasn't very tame in the first place, but he
would happily step-up onto my hand.
Over the course of the first week after we adopted him we noticed he was sneezing all day long and he had runny nares so we took him to the vet. He screamed bloody murder while he was being handled at the vet---to this day it's a scream he never does except for when he is at the vet so I call it the "vet scream"---and the next day when I reached out to pick him up he did the "vet scream" and fell off his perch and ran away and hid.
Over the course of a few days I tried to get him to step-up for me but I kept getting the same reaction. He was still sick so I didn't want to add undue stress and I also didn't want him to keep falling because he was hitting the ground really hard. I had no choice but to stop approaching him with my hands.
It took six months and I don't even know how many vet visits before he was diagnosed (and another six months of treatment before he was healthy again). He was manhandled, had blood drawn, had injections, and he was even anesthetized so they could perform x-rays. Last but not least he had his nares flushed repeatedly on numerous occasions (part of the treatment for strep pneumoniae which is what he had) which looks extremely unpleasant and uncomfortable. To top it all off both vets that treated him as well as every single vet tech that assisted was a woman---not to mention a woman (me) was the one taking him to the vet every single time and was also sitting in the room allowing these "horrible" thing to happen to him. At first he would run to me for protection and then I would just hand him over to the vet, it was really heartbreaking.
As a result he really hates women, especially their hands. The illness was almost four years ago but he hasn't forgotten how women handled him. Sometimes when I approach him just to talk to him he growls and hisses at me. Even though I work with him on tameness
every single day with clicker-training and positive reinforcement and I am the
only source of yummy treats I can't touch him and I can only handle him on a hand-held perch. He will take treats from my hand but that's as far as it goes, if I try to pet him or get him to step-up for me he bites to draw blood.
In contrast he loves my husband and will let him scratch his head and will step-up onto his hand. My husband doesn't really carry him around on his hand, though, because he will bite suddenly and unexpectedly and will draw blood.
He can target, turn in a circle, wave, and lift his wings, but in general he is not very tame and he is very, very moody. For the most part he prefers to be left alone to play with his toys and so inside and outside of the cage that is what I do. He likes to whistle and sing along to rock music so I play music for him, too.
Since once upon a time he would happily step-up for me and would even sit on my shoulder there is no doubt in my mind that he
could have been a tame and cuddly bird if not for the repeated vet visits spanning almost a year. Some days it makes me sad that he's fearful of hands and is a biter because of all the things he had to endure, but the reality is that I would rather have a
healthy bird than a tame bird.
I think Ollie's situation is a little different since he is not a rescue and didn't start out as a fearful bird so there is more hope for him remaining tame in the long-term than there ever was for my rescued brown-head. In the short-term I would absolutely avoid doing anything that stresses Ollie out since stress is so bad for a sick bird. I mean obviously there are some things you have to do such as medicating him but if you can avoid handling him beyond that, I would. If he's fearful of you approaching, don't approach him (unless necessary). You don't have to isolate him, you can still be in the room with him and talk to him softly from across the room.
If you can get him to accept treats from you, definitely just give him some treats throughout the day so he has a positive association with you and your hands.
It's really hard, trust me, I know how hard it is, but with a sick bird you have to think of their health before their tameness (and I know from reading your other thread that you are
definitely thinking of his health first, there's no doubt about that).
I really wish the best for you and poor little Ollie and I wish I had better suggestions for you but coming from personal experience I think it's best to leave him alone for now if he is fearful or stressed about interaction. Poor guy.
