by Pajarita » Tue Feb 11, 2014 3:36 pm
Lordy, that sounds terribly stressful for everybody in the household, bird included!. And, to be honest with you, I don't know what to tell you... I take in aggressive birds but they live in a birdroom, they are certainly not roaming free all over the house. I've had birds that prefer men over women but, with time (and because I am the only human they have contact with as my husband fears them), they have accepted me and stopped their attacks. In your case, been that your husband is also around, I don't know how you can break him out of this... especially since he has been doing it for so many years.
Now, do you keep him to a human or a bird light schedule? Because it's a known fact that sexual hormones and aggression go hand in hand in birds so eliminating the production of sexual hormones would have a calming effect on him but we are now rapidly approaching breeding season (and the birds are already starting to produce sexual hormones) so this will not work for quite a number of months - until the end of this year, actually, because when they are kept at a human light schedule for years, their endocrine system goes out of whack and it takes a loooooong time for it to start working right again. I usually have no problem with this because, like I said, they are in the birdroom and, whenever I have a new 'bad' one, I take precautions. I wear things that prevent them from attacking me, for example, if they go after my feet, I wear long skirts (I've worn bath towels hanging from my belt and dragging behind me); if they go after my ears/neck, I wear a towel or a thick hoodie - I have even worn an upside-down broom sticking up from my back like a giant erect crest -LOL- The idea is to wear or do something that would disconcert them (I've also clapped real loud or rang a cow bell) and, by the time this 'strange' thing becomes familiar, the bird has gotten used to me and feeling more comfortable with my presence. I also never interact with them physically (never ask them to step up or anything at all) so they realize that, as long as they leave me alone, there is nothing to fear. The 'fear' is because, when they attack me, I scare the bejesus out of them by cawing real loud and making bird threatening movements (I make my hand into a large beak by putting all the tips of my fingers together and raising it above my head, make downward movements as if the 'beak' was going to bite them while I make the very loud CAW CAW CAW!) I don't believe in ignoring or not reacting to aggression, this is not a natural behavior for parrots so I don't know why people think it's the thing to do. I never actually touch them (I even 'herd' them into a cage for a time-out) but I do show the strong reaction of a bird that is stronger than them and has taken exception to their aggression (a weaker bird would fly away while a stronger bird would keep his ground and make the other back off). I once had a real mean amazon which was also very intelligent and caught up real fast to the fact that it was all bluff but I discovered that he was scared of those long foam cylindrical things they sell for children to whack each other over the head (I think he thought it was a snake) so all I had to do was pick it up in my hand and he would fly/walk away from me real fast. Is there anything that scares him?
Of course, if your husband was not in the picture, it would be better for you to establish a better relationship with himu because you could start target training him from inside his cage and, as this would be the only interaction he has and you the only company, eventually, he would stop the attacks.
But, I'll be 100% honest with you, if you cannot change his behavior, I would seriously consider sending him to a cockatoo sanctuary where he could live with other birds in a large aviary because the situation you describe is not only bad for you and your husband, it's also very bad for him and he is suffering as much or more than you are.