really not a long time, just long enough for him to really want to get back on you). And talk all the time you are doing it, loud and in an angry tone of voice, repeating the 'Bad, BAD bird! Do not bite!' all the way to the cage but stop once you get there. Now, I NEVER recommend grabbing a bird but, in this case, I do think it's justified and let me explain why: THERE NEEDS TO BE A NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCE TO HIS BITING AND HE SHOULD NOT BE ALLOWED TO MANIPULATE THE CONSEQUENCE. I don't believe in punishment per se and I certainly do not believe in punishing a bird for doing something that is just a natural behavior (like screaming) but he can't be allowed to bite all the time for no good reason and, although putting him off you for a 5 minute time-out should be enough, it won't be if he, smart cookie that he is, dodges it (this puts him back in control of the situation). A comparison would be like a child running around a table after he did something wrong, I don't ever hit my older grandchildren, I never have any need, but, when they are little and need to learn certain things for their own good, I do, not hard, mind you, at most (and this is HARDLY ever and only when they are been real rotten with each other, show disrespect or keep on doing something I told them 3 or 4 times not to) I would swat them on their booties with my open hand but, once they get to an age (around 5 or 6), they think they are smarter than adults and start running around the table to prevent me from doing it so I move chairs to block them and, when I catch them, I give them a couple of good, stinging slaps, one more and a bit harder than I would have if they had not ran around the table. Plus, I start a long tirade in Spanish/French in a loud and angry voice (they don't understand all I am saying -but they learn certain words that I, apparently, say all the time and I realized this yesterday when I was doing it to my 5 year old and his 10 year old sister started saying some of them- but they sure understand the gist of it
It's imperative that he learns that biting is not going to get him what he wants and that been nice will and I can't think of any other way of doing this.
Wolf is right about his arms and hands been a mess with bites and I can attest to this personally as I saw the bruises from these bites when he came to pick up Skeeter. I've also had little bruises and sickle-shape cuts on my hands, arms, legs, feet, etc as well as ear and even head bites that drew blood. Right now, in the middle of the breeding season, tempers are hot in the birdroom and I got two bites -small ones and not real hard at all but they did break the skin a bit. One was kind of an accident but the other one as a hard nip done on purpose. There are parrots that never bite. They are few and far between but they do exist and even them would sometimes hurt you without even meaning to so bites go with territory and there is really nothing you can do to prevent them completely.
Don't worry about his diet and what he eats and doesn't eat, he will, in time, eat almost everything. It just takes a looooooong time and a lot of insisting. I had a gray that got blueberries (something all parrots love) once a week for 5 years before she decided to try one. Quigley's diet has improved 200% in a short time and will continue to improve but this improvement will be more in spurts than constant as time goes by.
You are doing good, Mikella, you really are! Don't worry so much about permanent trauma from a mistake or two, parrots are very forgiving when they realize that the mistakes are not done out of anything else than good intentions. He will find his 'groove' and it will go real fast once he is not producing sexual hormones, just keep at it and you'll see.




