by Pajarita » Thu Aug 20, 2015 9:06 am
Well, let's see. First and before anything else, I worry about your comment about his beak not been in good condition because, if that means that it was overgrown, he is not in 'not too bad a condition', he has liver damage and this needs to be addressed as soon as possible (change in diet and daily supplements). You also say you take him outside so I am assuming this means his wings are clipped and he cannot fly... At this point in his life and if he has always been kept in a cage or clipped, he might not regain flight but, if I were you, I would most definitely try to give this back to him.
Now, as to how to get you over your fear... well, my dear, nobody can tell you how to do that, it's entirely up to you. But he doesn't sound like a mean bird to me - at least, you don't say that he bites you every chance he gets which is what a mean bird would do. My very first rescue was a red lored amazon. She plucked her chest, screamed all day long and bit every chance she got. She was so mean that you had to be careful walking next to her cage because she would hang on from the edge of the door and stretching her entire body to reach you, bite any part of your body she could catch. But this bird ended up in full plumage, never making a peep and a very, very loving bird with good care. So, if that is the kind of 'success' story you were looking for, there it is!
First thing you need to do is put him on a good diet and that means no sunflower seeds, no peanuts, no free-feeding any type of high protein food (seeds, nuts, pellets, nutriberries, avicakes, etc). You need to make him gloop (or mash or chop) which he would get for breakfast accompanied by a leafy green, a fruit and a vegetable (a different one every day) -you would add the liver cleansers and tonics to the gloop on a daily basis. Then, for dinner, you can give him tree nuts (walnut, almond, pistachio, filbert, etc). He needs to be kept at a strict solar schedule with full exposure to dawn and dusk and go to sleep when night falls naturally. He needs to be let out of his cage for, at least, 4 hours a day, and you should spend, at least, 2 hours with him. If you are afraid, at the beginning, you can get him to step up to a stick and put him on a table stand with something for him to chew on (like a toy, a rolled-up magazine, some cardboard or a piece of non-toxic wood). Talk, sing, whistle to him; offer him a treat every now and then; praise praise praise him as often as you can and before you know it, he will be your friend.