by Pajarita » Thu Jun 26, 2014 8:42 am
Wolf's advice is all good and I'll just elaborate and add a bit to it but, before I start, I want to comment on just three things:
1. You said the guy who had him before (the one with the genius idea of using a broom) only had him for a week and that you know nothing about his previous life - two comments on this: A) can you ask the broom guy what he knows of his previous life? Because it's very important (name, diet, schedules, household type, etc) B) and this one is VERY important! This bird has been highly traumatized and you need to keep this in mind in all your dealings with him. Parrots never leave their families. Never. They are born into them and live their entire lives surrounded by their relatives until the day they die. They don't 'move away', they don't 'start a new family, they don't have anything to do with 'strangers' so, for them, to go from one hand to another is a very traumatic thing even when the homes are good. But to spend only one single week with an idiot man who scared him and to then be moved to another home must have him so very confused and scared that, most likely, what you are seeing now is not even close to what will be. The reason I mention this is not only to make you realize that he is like an abandoned and abused child but that what you do now, at the beginning of your relationship with him, is what is going to set the pace and build the foundation of it so you will need to be very careful and very slow about things.
2. I would not put a whole lot of emphasis on the fact that he seems to prefer your wife. They usually tend to trust the person who reminds them more of somebody they used to know that was kind to them so this could mean that his breeder was a woman or that his first owner was one. It doesn't mean he won't get to trust you just as much if you play your cards right - and that means your approach in terms of interaction and relationship and not the fact that you are the one that feeds and waters him and cleans his cage. Again, parrots are not like dogs (predators hunt -'work'- for their food, parrots forage -they just eat what's out there), providing them with food has absolutely no bearing whatsoever on his feelings. Food is something that, as far as they are concerned, should be there for them and not something they need to be grateful about.
3. You started training too soon. All birds need, at the very least, a couple of weeks (and aggressive ones can take years) but usually about a month to begin to feel comfortable with the new humans. You are a stranger and he doesn't know you from Adam. He finds your wife familiar and seems to trust her more but I warn you that this doesn't mean he will put up with anything from her, either, so she needs to be careful around him and both of you need to observe him super carefully to learn his body language, his likes, his dislikes, his phobias, etc.
So, please, take your time to comfort and reassure him of your commitment by allowing him to set the pace and by setting up a few routines and schedules. Animals in captivity are greatly reassured by firm, unchangeable schedules (meaning, no weekends, no sick days, no nothing but the same identical thing day after day after day -as time goes by and he settles down and bonds with you, you can start slightly relaxing this but you can't at the beginning) and this works even more for parrots because they are not only highly intelligent and with excellent reasoning capabilities (they actually put 2 and 2 together and reach conclusions), they also have a sense of time (past and future) and, as they don't belong to hierarchical societies, captivity and the lack of control over their own lives is terribly stressful to them and, what a schedule and a routine does is allow them to predict what will happen and when which gives them a sense of control over their own lives and their environment thereby reducing stress.
I don't know what kind of diet you are giving him but my toos are excellent eaters (and I do mean EXCELLENT!) and hate dry things so start him off on a good fresh food diet. Mine LOVE greens and fruits and often go for them before they go for the gloop (dish of cooked whole grains, pulses and veggies). They also hate dry stuff. I don't feed pellets because I am convinced they are not the best dietary option but, once a week, I give them birdy bread for breakfast instead of gloop and although it's quite moist, they still dunk in their water bowls before they eat it.
Another thing you need to be careful about are hormones (toos are consider high hormone birds) and the only way to control this in captivity is keeping them at a solar schedule with full exposure to dawn and dusk.
Aside from that, if you don't free-feed protein (pellets, seeds, nuts, nutriberries, etc) and you can identify the nut he likes best, you can always put a couple of them in his cage so he will go back in it on his own. You start by giving him the nut at the time you would want him to go back in it (like, for example, right before bed time -you need to turn off the artificial lights when the sun is halfway down to setting) while he is in the cage and say a phrase (like "Wanna a nut? - Look, Prof, mmmmm, yummy, yummy nut!") as you walk towards his cage (you would be giving him his dinner at this time also and that should be enough if you feed protein food at this time but it's always good to get him to go there with a single nut so you can do the same thing at any other time of the day). Once you see he recognizes the phrase and gets excited waiting for his treat (he'll look at you and the nut intently and might even erect his crest), you can start letting him out, say, an hour or two prior his dinner time (start on a weekend so you don't have to rush through the whole thing because it will take him a while at the beginning) and, regardless of where he is at the time, walk toward his cage saying the phrase (a few times, not just once) and put the nut in it making sure he is looking at you and just walk away. Try not to look at him directly, do it out of the corner of your eye, and see if he moves toward the cage. If he doesn't, sit down at a goodly distance, turn your face away and wait. If he still doesn't, leave the room and come back when it's dark.