If this is a molting thing then it suggests to me that your bird in not on a natural solar light schedule which begins before the bird wakes with the twilight period that becomes the dawn and runs throughout the daylight hours through the twilight period that we call dusk on until full dark when the bird should be fast asleep. This is important as it is the two twilight periods that work together to adjust and tune the birds internal biological clock. This biological clock controls the timing for the bird to cycle into and out of breeding condition as well as when to begin its molting. If the internal clock is not in tune with the seasons then the bird is often hormonal all year long as well as prone to molting at any time of the year. The molt can be just a few feathers here and there all year long or it can be abnormally hard such as you are describing.
Wolf, I meant to add more information in my last post in response to the above, but didn't get a chance to do so. Here we go:
Guilty: I was doing great on the solar schedule situation right up until the time change happened. For a few weeks, Luna was getting uncovered after the sun had already come up, and I was trying to keep her up after I got home until her usual bedtime of 8pm. However, because of the time change, in her head 8pm is now 7pm and she's very strict about it.
I realized there was a really easy way to fix this and I felt stupid for not realizing earlier. In order to account for me waking up at various times each morning, I stopped covering her sleeping cage all the way, just a corner of it for some shelter. Since she sleeps in a separate room with the door closed next to a big window, I don't actually need to cover her cage for her to get darkness. This way, she sees the sunrise through the window, and since I've started doing this (about two weeks), I know she wakes up by herself, and only starts chirping once she hears that we are awake, at which point I go get her. (This bird is so polite!) The time change is still super inconvenient, because this means that on days when I get home after work, it has just gotten dark, and Luna already wants to be in bed. She acts frantic about getting her dinner, and as soon as she's had her fill, immediately demands to be put away.
Since I've moved her main daytime cage to the bright window, she spends a lot of her time on the corner that gives the most sunlight. She LOVES the sun, and I like to think her feathers have gotten a bit brighter...? Maybe it's my imagination.
The real reason I remembered to post is because Luna has been acting different for about a week now. Her diet hasn't changed, except that I added organic beets to the last batch, but I haven't read anything about beets being bad. Suddenly, though, she doesn't seem to really be interested in hanging out, and doesn't seem to prefer me at all. She likes Michael better, and when she's not near him (in the mornings on the windowsill in the bedroom or perched on his chest), she just wants to be in her cage and doesn't want to be picked up, whereas previously, if she was on her cage too long and not sitting with us, she would chirp until we got her.
She doesn't want to get scritches anywhere near as much as before, and her hormonal clucking and squatting behavior has come back (even after over two months of absence). You'd think that having her see sunrise as well as sunset would make sure that she is regulated, but unless she suddenly thinks it's "spring" after a few weeks of not seeing the sun actually rise and having a "shorter, winter" day... I don't understand her behavior change.
98% of the time that she's acting hormonal, it's when she's with Michael. I don't seem to have the same effect on her at all. When he hangs out with her at home and I'm gone, he says she does "the dance" a lot. I didn't increase her protein intake, if anything, I'm only feeding her some pellets every few days in an effort to decrease protein. She's been getting some sprouts everyday along with her batch because she really loves them, but those aren't super high in protein once they've been sprouted.. right? (mung beans, lentils, some black eyed peas, varied grains, sunflower, other stuff). She didn't eat any of those the first two months I had her, because I tried a couple times and she was completely uninterested.
Also, remember, she's 10, so this isn't the normal behavior shift you get with a younger bird. However, maybe this is just an especially hormonal phase that will pass and I'm just not acquainted with it yet? Seems odd, because I read somewhere that Pionus breeding season is somewhere in the realm of July-September.
She barely has any new pin feathers these days, so it seems she is mostly done with that molt too. (was it a molt? or was it her just growing new feathers from having a better diet? I don't know...)
Anyways, I'm just slightly taken aback, and wish I could better understand what's going on.
Any suggestions / opinions welcome.