Oh, for heavens sake! It was a mistake. I thought it was Brandon posting that, not Seagoatdeb. The whole idea that I would do it on purpose is ridiculous - what possible purpose could it have?
And, no, Seagoatdeb, what Michael does is not the same thing you do. First of all, the purpose is completely different. He does this to get the parrot used to getting toweled (a very useful thing to be able to do) completely stress-free. You do it to get a parrot used to human touch fast (something that is not necessary at all). He does it by gradually approaching the parrot with a towel in his hand until he can real close to it, then he starts allowing the parrot to touch it with its beak and so on and so forth until he can towel him without the parrot getting stressed out. As you explained your method, it consists on dropping a towel on top of the bird on the first try - no gradual approach in baby steps at the bird's pace but a sudden one giant leap all at once which is stressful to the bird.
As to comparing your experience to Michael's or anybody else in terms of years... I don't think that is a valid argument in your or anybody's favor. It's not the length of time one has been doing something but how well one does it. For one thing, Michael has a formal background in animal behavioral sciences and, for another, I know people who have been doing parrots for many, many years and still don't do it right - and I know people who have been doing parrots for just a few years who are excellent at it. The fact is that, for what I can glean from postings, most people who have been doing parrots a long time seem to have gotten stuck in their methods and tend to continue using techniques that are no longer recommended. The 'I've been doing it for a long time and it has always worked for me" argument is ubiquitous in birdsites discussions.






