friend2parrots wrote:...what it requires is time, training, and the willingness to research and implement scientifically proven methods of bird behavioral modification, and the willingness to abandon methods that have been shown to be either ineffective or detrimental to the reinforcement of desired behaviors...
This is so well put.
Although you have had success with using punishment in the past punishment is an outdated method of behavioral modification. It was once used widely in animal training but is no longer advocated due to advances in behavioral science showing conclusively that animals respond better to positive reinforcement than they do to punishment.
You may not "get behind" the idea of ignore the bite but it's a proven fact that ignoring the bite while also teaching desired behavior using positive reinforcement is more effective than using punishment, as well as more compassionate.
Using punishment with a "Jekyll and Hyde" rescue is really inadvisable because although you can usually get away with punishment (blowing in the face or squirting with water) on well-adjusted or young birds the likelihood of it backfiring with a rescue is very high. If your rescue is unexpectedly lunging or biting it has trust issues and the way to address this is over time establishing a history of trust by making sure the bird
always associates you with positive things. If you use punishment with a rescue bird the bird will associate you with the punishment and it will damage your relationship and the bird will have no reason to trust you and may even begin to mistrust you because you are the source of negative things.
friend2parrots wrote:Barbara heidenriechs book The Parrot Problem Solver is really good. she does not talk that much about clicker training, though, but the rest of the info in that book is extremely relevant and important for your situation.
I agree that The Parrot Problem Solver is a very good book and would be relevant to your situation; it deals specifically with aggression in parrots.
e_flamingo wrote:He doesn't like getting air in the face, I don't like getting bit.
Please seriously think about what you are saying. A bird doesn't bite because it deliberately sets out to do something you don't like. It's not being malicious. It bites as a response to feeling fear or aggression because it's a wild animal that's acting on instinct.
You, on the other hand, are a human being who
does not act on instinct and have higher reasoning and the ability to plan your actions. When you explicitly set out to do something your bird "doesn't like" as a reaction to something the bird is only doing out of instinct you are retaliating against an animal for doing something that just comes naturally. Why would you do that?
I know you are a compassionate person because you have not only taken in a rescue but have also nurtured another malnourished bird back to health so please reconsider "getting revenge" as a strategy to combat biting.
e_flamingo wrote:In the past, I'd carry a water bottle with a spray head on it and when bird would lunge, bird would get hit with stream of water.
Birds in the wild and in captivity need to bathe. Bathing is a happy time! Water should only be associated with positive things. If you use water as punishment (and especially if you use the spray bottle both for punishment and for giving a bath which you may or may not do) then it's very confusing to the bird because water has both positive and negative associations.
Good luck with your rescue and I hope you can "get behind" the idea of using only positive reinforcement to address his behavioral problems because rescues can be delicate psychologically. They require a lot of patience and time but it's very rewarding to gain their trust over time. I know because I have a rescue.