by Pajarita » Tue Aug 12, 2014 9:22 am
No, he is skittish about noises and he stays in a 'frozen' position because he is scared. This is a young baby and he has already had three homes, and that's not good at all. It's hugely traumatic for them. Birds that are stressed out when babies, remain high-strung all their lives so, if I were you, I would concentrate on making him feel comfortable and nothing else at this point. And that means no training. It means putting his cage in a quiet spot with its back against a wall (the cage is high, right? The top perches should be, at least, at your eye level, never lower) where he would get natural light from a window (he needs the exposure to dawn and dusk), good artificial light (should be a good quality full spectrum -CRI 94+ and Ktemp 5000-5500) and spending lots and lots of time with him. The taming technique that Wolf wrote for you is good but, usually, it's not needed for babies because they need company more so than adults and have not yet learned to distrust humans. But, in his case and because of his going from one hand to another, you might want to watch him super carefully and see if you need to follow it.
As to diet, no parrot should be free-fed protein and that means no bowl full of pellets, seeds, nuts, nutriberries, etc in the morning and for all day eating. It means feeding them the protein food in the evening and the healthy food for breakfast and all day picking. He is still very young and needs soft foods (fresh twice a day). Soft foods are, just as the name implies, something soft (think of baby food) like old-fashioned oatmeal (better if you make him the steel cut or Irish oatmeal), polenta, couscous, pasta -any of them mixed with pureed veggies and fruits (baby jars). Or, you can switch him to gloop, mash or chop (my birds eat gloop) so you can start him on a healthy food that he will continue to eat for the rest of his life.