by Pajarita » Mon Dec 22, 2014 12:04 pm
Ok, let's see....
- Wolf is correct, your parrot has been hormonal for a long time and it's now reacting more because these things will come to a head if not take care of opportunely.
- Again, Wolf is correct in that he regards you as his mate and your are right in that this is a completely unhealthy relationship - both for you and for him. For you because, as you have put it, you are a prisoner in your house and dependent on his reactions to do a normal life - and for him because, regardless of how much he might love you and how much you might love him, a human cannot fulfill the requirements as a parrot mate so it's a relationship that will never, ever work out for him or you.
- Light schedule is not two hours before and two hours after twilight. It's all a matter of light, not the clock. It's like this: he is sleeping in his covered (or not) cage, you uncover it when the sky begins to get a bit of light (this time of the year 6:45 am) and he starts waking up with it, when the sky is completely lit (8:00 am), you turn on the overhead artificial lights which should be full spectrum - the day proceeds with his routine and normal schedule (breakfast, bath, interaction, noon rest, more activity), once you see the sun halfway down the sky toward the horizon, you turn off the overhead artificial lights (3:00 pm -and this is actually a bit late but I do it at this time because there is still enough light for the system to work) and feed him his dinner, he eats, preens a bit, goes to his roosting perch and goes to sleep, cage gets covered (or not - I do it at 5:30 pm). I cover the cages I have in the livingroom and diningroom because although I keep the lights off in those rooms, there is still light that shines into them from the kitchen but I get up early and uncover them when there is the merest sliver of light in the sky and cover them again once they are almost asleep.
- Their breeding season in their natural habitat is determined by the specific needs of the species and evolution set a certain number of daylight hours for their glands to start producing sexual hormones as well as other triggers (in their case, it's weather and food availability because although the breeding season varies from subspecies to subspecies, it's only because of their geographical location and the time of the year when they get the rainy season -they breed when it's finished) but this works in their place of origin the same way it works anywhere else in the world so it doesn't really matter whether the conditions are right in December or in July or whether they are in Africa or in America because, as far as their bodies go, it's all about conditions. I believe your Pod is a Massaicus (mine is a Fantiensis) which comes from Kenya, their breeding season starts in June (rainy season is March, April and May) and the babies will be born starting late July and August (28 day incubation and they usually have one clutch of 2 to 4 eggs per year because the babies stay with the parents until the next breeding season) and, mid June, there are 12 hours of light and 12 of dark (this is pretty much the same all year round because Kenya is smack on the Equator) so, in order for the 'control' to work, he needs to have lower daylight hours than 12 to stop producing sexual hormones but, because the number is only set through the 'stop watch' of twilight, which cannot be reproduced with artificial light, you (and all of us) have no choice but to expose them to dawn and dusk.
Does this explain things better for you?