by Pajarita » Fri Jul 29, 2016 9:30 am
Welcome to the forum, Mark, Harry and Mrs!
There is another way to sex a gray and that is looking at the tail undercoverts (the shorter feathers that 'cover' the beginning of the long feathers under the tail). If they have a thin gray edge to them, you have a girl and, if they don't, you have a boy but, of course, DNAing is always the 100% sure way of finding out.
You say that Harry was not hand-fed but, to tell you the truth, I find that very difficult to believe. Why would anybody breeding grays NOT handfeed? It would make no sense whatsoever as a parent-raised bird which has never imprinted to people would never make as good a pet as a handfed one.
Wolf is correct that, depending on the breed of the dog and its individual temperament, it is entirely possible to get them used to having a bird around BUT you also have to take into consideration the bird's reaction to the dog because if the bird is terrified of it, you need to work on him/her first. But, if the circumstances are not propitious for it, you would be better off keeping the dog outside the living room for the out-of-cage time (which should be no less than 4 hours every single day). Dogs sleep A LOT during the day so it would be no real hardship for him/her to be in another room for a few hours. I have 5 dogs and what I do is put a baby gate on the kitchen doorway to keep them there while the birds are out in the living and dining room - works just fine! The birds do fly into the kitchen but they mostly keep on the higher surfaces and they dogs leave them alone -even Sweeetpea Senegal, which LOVES to go to ground and does it all the time!
I will ask you to do a bit more in-depth research about their diet because I have to tell you that meat is a big no-no for birds. Parrots eat insects (two species of cockatoos quite a lot but most of the others not too many) but their meat has virtually no fat and no bad cholesterol which pork, chicken and beef do. One would think that meat is meat but that is not so, they are all different and, for an animal that did not evolve to consume animal fat and bad cholesterol, eating them is real bad because nature did not give them a mechanism to get rid of it (as carnivores and omnivores have).