snakesentwined wrote:Hi guys
Isis has developed a real obsession with flying up onto shelves at the moment - and systematically hurling everything on them onto the floor. The worst is our extensive collection of CDs and DVDs - which she cracks the cases of first, before flicking them over her shoulder and onto the floor...
We've tried everything we can think to stop her and let her know that this is inappropriate - from cajoling and sternly telling her "No!" to finding other distractions - but nothing works. Any ideas - either of how to stop her (besides clipping her wings, which we really don't want to do), or for 'Parrot-proofing' the shelves so that she can't get to them?
David
Interesting snake. Here is a suggestion that may work for you. This is because my parrot would climb down from his cage onto the dresser. On the dresser I had some essential oils, and christian things, etc. I was training him the same way you were, with saying, "No!", and everytime I would even see him starting to climb down in that direction, I would say, "No! EEEHHH EEEHHH EEEHHH! UP UP UP UP UP UP!" (pointing upward toward the top of the play top cage). He finally caught on and when I would say that, he would stop, and go up the cage (climbing back up), shying away from the dresser. Sometimes he would get on the dresser, etc. Then after 3 times in a row (cause they will keep going back repeatedly, until they learn to understand, or try, etc.) - after 3 times, put them in the cage. (3 times and you're out). Then they learn that way.
When you're trying to teach them not to do something you don't want them to do - or not to go somewhere you don't want them to go, after you use this process 3 times, taking them back to their perch, etc., with the "No! eh eh eh!", and they keep going right back to the forbidden place repeating THAT 3 times, - in a row - - - . . . . then you put them in the cage after 3 times of
(? disobeying ?), with time, this is how they learn not to go there. What helps them catch on is partly that they don't necessarily want to go in the cage; they want to stay out and play, etc. And they know that if this keeps happening, they go into the cage, so eventually that's how they learn, and they stop doing it or stop going there. If you keep the process consistent. Also keep it consistant because you don't want to confuse them. I'm using the word disobeying for lack of a better word, because they're not actually disobeying; they have to learn to understand. This is how they learn to understand these types of things, by this process, because then they will associate the forbidden place with going into the cage (which is not what they want to do; they would rather stay out, be free, play, etc.)
Put back in cage for a while, then let him out a little later, like, ya know? - trying again. Keep consistant with this process. The other thing I did in combination with that, eventually, is that I took everything off the dresser and found/made other places for those things. But I still keep up the training process, and he has gone to get on the dresser less and less. See? He hardly goes on it anymore. He understands now that - that is a forbidden place. (Even when he tries to reach over from the cage and chew on the dresser - same process). He would try to get on the dresser, you see, and chew things up, etc., and also take the little bottles of essential oils and put them in his mouth trying to chew them up too. Essential oils bad for birds - not safe.
Now, things were off the dresser for quite a while. Then came christmas, and I put christmas decorations on the dresser. When I then put the christmas decorations on the dresser, he still, then, hardly went to the dresser, for the decorations. He did go, though, only sometimes, (oh boy new toys! new attractive stuff for me to play with and chew on! LOL!), and I would still use the same process of shooing him away as explained above, with distracting his attention each time with playing with him with his foot toys on top of his play top cage. Or giving him one of his favorites ("Mama get the nut!") - oh boy, he goes crazy happy when he hears that, cause he knows the nut is coming, etc., you know? The point being, he hardly goes to the dresser anymore because with that time he's learned that mommy doesn't want him to go there.
He's trying to communicate playing with you, actually, it's called "bird-fetch". When he throws the things, he wants you to get them, pick them up, and toss them back at him, so he can get them and toss them back at you again so you can fetch them, repeating. This is part of their playful interaction. Try putting his foot toys up there instead, in a decorative way, and also in an attractive way for him, if that option is also ok with you, and if that is a place which he feels comfortable perching on. Or for that matter, move the shelves and try mounting perches onto the walls where the shelves were, putting newspaper under the perches on the floor to catch the poo droppings. You can actually make that area a play area for him, see? I think you get the point. Hope that helps.
