by Wolf » Mon Jul 14, 2014 4:48 pm
Ok, I'm back, I didn't have time to finish with my last post.
Some birds recognize that the bird in the mirror is themselves, but some birds do not and as a result they get stressed over the bird in the mirror. Could this cause your bird to pluck? In my opinion it could.
Apples and most fruits are high in water content and should be introduced slowly into their diet, same as any other food should be. When ever you change your diet it causes changes in the way your body processes the new food and this is no different for them.
From what you have told me, except for the mirror, I am not seeing anything that should be causing this bird undue stress. However, also based on what you have said, he is stressing about something, that is unless I am misunderstanding the statement that he is getting more nervous than usual. I am at this point pretty well certain that you have no idea as to what is causing the stress and that it is simply an unintentional error on your part.
So you need to take a closer look at what you are doing with him and start watching him for any indication that he does not want to do something that you are asking him to do. birds do not live in a heirarchial type of social system, one in which there is a top bird calling the shots for the rest of the flock. They live in a flock where each bird does as it chooses to do. This works quite well for them as they are naturally non aggressive in nature. This is different than what we are accustomed to and different than most of the other animals that we choose for pets and it require us to learn to think a little differently than we normally do.
Let us look at something simple, in order to show a comparison. We want our dog to come to us and so we call the dog by name and ask it to come to us. The dog does not come to us and so we attach a leash to the dogs collar and try again and again the dog ignores our request to come to us, so we pull on the leash a little and call the dog again and release the pressure. We use a tug and release method to get the dog to come to us even though he clearly doesn't want to. The dog is fine with this and soon learns to come when called. Not a problem as the dog normally lives with this type of social structure in the pack as well.
Now we want our bird to come to us and the equivalent to calling the dog, for a bird is the request to step up. We ask our bird to step up and he doesn't. We could wait a couple of minutes and ask for the bird to step up and maybe offer it a treat to do so and the bird steps up. Or we could say to ourselves that we asked for the step up and so the bird must step up and so we push our finger into the bird putting him off balance to get him to step up and so he complies. The bird has only learned that you will try to force him and you lose a little trust and the next time that you ask for the step up and he doesn't you again push him with your finger and instead of stepping up as you expected he moves away and you end up chasing him around with your hand to get him to step up which eventually he does. Now the next time that you ask for the step up and try the bird tries to move away, you follow and the bird bites. you now have a bird that has learned that you will try to force it to do what you want and so now not only does he no longer trust you, he now is afraid of your hands.
Now I am not saying that you are doing this or that you have done this, but if he is afraid of hands it is possible that someone has done something similar to him. but, I did want to show the difference in the way that birds think, from the way that dogs and ourselves think, and they difference in what is learned by this difference in how we think about things.