by Wolf » Sun Aug 16, 2015 6:58 am
First of all you can not train one being to like another, especially when the other being is sentient and intelligent. That is like me wanting to know how to train you to like jack grant, or someone else we don't know. Secondly, you are dealing with a wild creature and not a domesticated animal, such as a dog is. Thirdly, you are dealing with a prey animal as opposed to a predator.
I start off in this manner, not to insult you, but to try to clarify the nature of the being you are dealing with, ie. your Sun Conure. You are dealing with a wild animal, although parrots have been kept as pets around the world for nearly as long as man has walked upright, they were never domesticated and they ones that were kept as pets were all wild caught. This practice remained unchanged until the 1970's, when bans were placed on the importation of exotic birds due to conservation concerns. This means that at best your Sun Conure is only a few generations removed from the wild and it still retains all of the drives of a wild Sun Conure.
You are dealing with a prey animal, this is extremely important to know and remain constantly aware of as to some degree it defines your relationship with your bird. The vast majority of prey animals have their eyes on the side of their head so as to better see the approach of a predator. Most predators have their eyes on the front of their head to better focus on their prey. You are a predator and the manner in which you look at your bird will affect its behavior. This is especially true during the early stages of having your bird when it does not yet trust you and has no reason to do so.
You are dealing with a sentient and intelligent creature. This is also important to be aware of as your bird is self aware of itself as a living being and has the intelligence of at least a 3 to 5 year old human child. It things things through and makes its own choices and like you it is aware of this and it has all of the same feelings that you do as well as the need to socialize with others of its own kind and to feel as if it has some control over its own life and what happens to it.
You need to know these three things and give some serious thought to what these things mean so that you can learn to adjust your thinking about your bird and how you think about it and treat it or you will never have a great relationship with the bird.
Now to answer your question, you do not train the bird to like you, that is something that it will do or not do all on its own. What you can do is to spend time with the bird when your son is not around as this will help you to avoid getting bitten, When your son leaves, the bird will be likely to accept you as its new number one human, with all the rights and privileges of this status. This will probably be after a brief period of depression and grieving the loss of your son, whom the bird will think is dead. Why else would he not be there?
If your bird has a solid band on its leg we may be able to figure out the year it was hatched.