-Rescued Timneh grey, male pied cockatiel
2. How would you describe their average daily noise making schedule?
-Morning and evening noise-fest lol, otherwise only when I leave the room do they get loud. Cockatiel chatters etc off-and-on all day, my grey is usually pretty quiet.
3. Do you have moments in which you say to yourself "oh my god, I can't live like this”?
-Not usually---except I am terrified that neighbours/family will complain about my tiel's extremely loud hormonally-driven contact call, and yes lol sometimes it drives me nuts. Other than that I'm pretty good at ignoring bad sounds (my grey very rarely acts up annoying-noise wise) and rewarding good noise.
4. How do you, or did you, handle your parrots when they are loud.
-Properly I'll turn my back and ignore them, rewarding them with my attention when they are silent or better when they offer another noise. Although sometimes I do use the whisper/shush technique---which I find only reinforcing unfortunately.
5. Any other notes or tips on the subject will be most welcomed.
-Realize that your bird is a wild animal. It has needs. There will be morning and night flock concerts--you cannot change that (although you can set the tone---only reinforce noises you like---don't think because they have to have these noise-fests that you have to put up with annoying sounds). Also---you can do whatever amount of 'training' humans might recommend for your bird---but it is a wild animal with instincts to fufill and a huge amount of energy in its body and spirit. Parrots *need* to move, you can't expect a parrot to be quiet when its been sitting still all day. This is why my birds are flighted, we have daily flight time. Also make sure they are bathed, stimulated and healthy--not to mention well fed. This will keep the noise down because they are tired and fufilled






- Sheldon