by Pajarita » Mon May 26, 2014 9:44 am
Weeeeelllll, I would not go as far as saying that amazons are like any other parrot... but, then, I wouldn't go as far as saying this for any other species, either. The thing with zons is the huge difference between males and females in terms of temperament. Females are almost always docile, you can get an abused, severely neglected or super hormonal one that bites but, as soon as you take care of the problems, she will turn sweet-tempered. Males are another story. Even well taken care of and well-loved males have their nasty moments. They are hugely sensitive to long days and a high protein diet which will not only mess up their liver big time but also make them super hormonal and, when you talk about male zons and hormones, you are talking about aggression. It's in their nature regardless of how imprinted they are to humans and how well treated they are. These are large, powerful, naturally assertive and almost fearless birds and, if they are cranky or you do something wrong, they will let you know it. I got bit yesterday by Zeus. It was nothing, actually, just a little cut in my right ear and entirely my fault because I decided to give SweetPea (male Senegal) a cup with his dinner seeds on a small platform that hangs off the cage placed under the amazons big platform (the little one is the kind they sell in birdstores in different sizes and hooks on the bars of the cage while the big ones are hanging from the ceiling -theirs is a custom made one 2.5 ft wide and 8 ft long). I've never done this before and shouldn't even have tried it because Precie, Zeus' mate, is sitting on her second clutch of the season in a cardboard on the big platform, but I wasn't thinking and, when I called SweetPea to get his dinner (he's a pain in the neck because he doesn't have a specific place to eat like the other birds do -well, with the except of his friend, the Jenday who does the same thing SweetPea does- so I put food down and call him to it by saying: "SweetPea, peanuts -all seeds are called peanuts- right here!" and he comes flying) but he didn't and kept on saying: "Right here! Right here!" (he wanted his dinner where he wanted it -LOL) so I accommodated him and got bit for getting too close to the 'forbidden zone' -LOL- Like I said, my fault 100% because I should have known better. But this is a reaction that you would never get from a hen, only from a male.