Hi guys,
I have a question about hormonal behavior in female Greys. Our DNA-sexed female Congo African Grey, Clover, (our only bird) will turn 4 years old around April. She is clicker trained and generally quite tolerant considering that she was not hand raised. She steps up and lets me move her around the house with me, usually 10-20 moves a day. She loves her daily shower with me—the highlight of her day. I work from home and am around most of the time. Most days she’s out all day, occasionally, she’s mostly in the cage, but I’m usually just a few feet away in either case.
About 2 weeks ago, she suddenly began ripping up the sheets of newspaper I put in the bottom of her cage after the daily cleaning. She spends hours shredding it, hides under it, peeking out, and especially scratching the smooth cage floor with her feet as if digging… the way chickens scratch for food. She is doing this very robustly. Also, she had an unusual aggressive incident with me. She has bitten before, but only one bite at a time, and usually only a pinch. A few days ago, I asked her to step up to go to her favorite shower and she gave me a minor bite. I left, came back in again a few minutes later, she “happily” stepped up, then instantly launched an attack causing 6 deep (for a Grey) bites, some of which later became infected. There are 6 v-shaped flaps of skin missing from my thumb region. I had to shake her off my hand to get her to stop. Since then, I’ve only had her step up on a gloved hand, and she seems completely normal—not hostile at all. But she’s still obsessed with the scratching and ripping apart newspapers in her cage. Usually, she asks non-stop to “come out” “put on your harness,” “go outside,” “go to the kitchen,” “go on your perch” (meaning her playstand). But she is now very happy to stay in her cage and shred paper.
Other than the attack, she hasn’t shown any personality change such as wanting more scritches, “flirting,” or anything like that. (She’s not that interested in contact normally, either). It’s all about her and the newspaper and scratching at the floor. Is this hormonal behavior? What should I do? Should I find something she can’t rip apart to put on the floor of her cage? Is she likely to stay aggressive for a while? When will this phase end for now? Will it happen every spring, or a few times a year, or what?
Thanks, Sharon in Istanbul





