I stand by my reaction to the nature of the poll.
I would agree that every interaction is training at some level -- that's true no matter what kind of animal you are interacting with, including humans. What I meant to quote was "training is everything". At any rate, the point was that I was getting the impression that training was of the utmost importance in the relationship.
I think I adequately addressed the issue of what circumstances would lead me to practice it. I see it as a tool, not a fixed part of the routine. I think saws are useful, but I don't carry one around every day. I get it out when I need it. I don't see any benefit in removing food from the cages, and as others have pointed out it provides a nice hedge against fluctuations in my schedule, which is not very regular. If I had a bird that was being very problematic with hormonal behavior I might try reducing the portion of food left to reduce an impression of abundance, but I would probably still leave the food during the day, just leave less of it. Same for reducing weight in an overweight bird.
I also am going to argue that it isn't a correct analogy that we are "food managed" as humans. Nor that birds are naturally food managed Those of us living in developed nations with reasonable incomes have access to food at all times. We don't EAT all the time, but food is rarely more than a few steps away. At work I set my own lunch and break times, there's a snack machine down the hall, and I keep some emergency lunch items in my office. I might manage my own intake in order to manage my weight, but it is MY choice, I'm not physically denied access to food. And birds, in nature, are surrounded by food at all times. It's feeding behavior that has a daily pattern, not food availability. So in my mind, setting up a situation in which food is only available for brief periods is actually more artificial. I agree it might be better to set that food up in a foraging manner and I may work towards that, as that would be more natural and more entertaining. Even so, I don't see my birds eating all the time either, just because the food is there. They still tend to have a morning/evening pattern which I reinforce with fresh food deliveries.







