coral wrote:vikki puts her huge macaws in cages for biting so actually you can do that to a huge macaw... birds shouldnt want to interact with the owner for food but for the interaction itself food is a given cuddling and playing are what it should look to you for imo. Roz and Capt and Vikki and a few others on this form really seem to know what their doing with parrots theyve had far for experience than you have and clipping is not punishment they are still birds even if they cannot fly, roz breeds and her aviaries are outside if she opens the doors they might fly away or maybe she clips her indoor birds because she has other pets and doesnt want it all over the house for their own safety. michael you dont know everything im sorry. it seems to me that your birds only want to interact with you for food because they are always hungry. i have not once associated marty's bad behavior with hunger. he acts certain ways for certain reasons as all birds do but his reasons are being a re-homed bird he was aggressive for neglect and had a strong fear for adult women, he was afraid of a new environment, he was upset or scared, and he did not want to go back in his cage. i have taught him to not fear people in fact he lets almost anyone pet him (a few women excluded), he has learned that if he doesnt bite i wont leave the room and if he screams i ignore him but he rarely screams for attention anymore, he has learned to love his new home and the new adventures he gets to go on. when he used to bite i would leave to room until he calmed down and everything would be fine again. my method is similar to roz and kaylayuh's but not the same but has the same effect. he will never associate me with fear. your birds only seem to want to interact with you because you offer food and they are hungry. do you ever just let them eat and cuddle with you? i trained marty without hunger and treats. marty forages for his treats. i really disagree with your methods michael and you seem to love to argue i dont have a very good impression of you.
This is all coming from people who don't have real birds. They have something else. A clipped parrot is not a bird, it's a completely different animal. The parrot in its natural state is very curious, independent, and destructive. The people you esteem all caused severe physical harm to their parrots because they were unable to control them otherwise. All the reasons you mentioned why people would want to clip their birds come down to not being able to control them and that is because as I said, [flighted] parrots are very difficult to manage because they are so free willed.
My interest is to be able to teach my parrots or manipulate their environment such that we can coexist in harmony. But also it is my goal to give the healthiest life possible with the most freedom possible to my parrots. I do all of this without physically altering my parrots but rather by using "training." Training is a way of teaching and convincing people or animals that things should be done a certain way, particularly if it contradicts what they want to do. People go to school to learn how to exist in our world. Training is used on parrots to teach them how to exist in our world. But parrots are really difficult because they fly. And by flying they have a 3 dimensional existence that is so unlike ours. Most people can't even begin to fathom how to think in 3d such so they clip their birds and turn them into a 2d terrestrial animal instead.
For people who don't interact with them or who can dedicate an entire room to their flighted birds, managing their parrots is not an issue. The environment can be entirely manipulated such that the parrot can do no harm (to itself or our stuff). That is a very good way of giving their parrots extensive freedom while preserving their own human way of life. Not all of us have the space or means to do things this way. Without a dedicated bird room it leaves us with 4 options:
-Keep the bird caged (always or more often)
-Tolerate the damage, mess, and problems
-Train the parrot (along with manipulating environment which includes food and room)
-Clip the wings to punish flight attempts
Since I know someone is going to bring it up, I'll also add another intermediate half option that some people use which is to do a very light or partial clip so that the parrot can still fly but tires more quickly. Instead of punishing flight it just reduces it.
Keeping the bird caged all the time to avoid flight or a lot more voids the parrot of social interaction, freedom, exercise, and kind of makes having one pointless. Many of us cannot afford to tolerate the mess/damage that a wild flighted parrot can do. We may not have the money/time to keep replacing our furniture and things because the parrot thinks everything in the house is its chew toy. Furthermore, they can be items that are dangerous that no amount of bird proofing can solve (for example chewing power cords). Clipping the parrot is the most common way of dealing with the trouble that keeping a bird presents. It's both for convenience and for control. The convenience is that it cannot fly into unreachable places and do damage. The control aspect is that most people fear that their parrot would not want to be on/with them if it had the choice.
This leaves training. However, the problem with training a flighted parrot is that if it has all it wants, there is nothing you can use as a reward for training. Petting, attention, and cuddling can all be rewards but the problem is that there is only so much of it that birds want. Sure I can get my birds to fly to me for some petting/attention. But this only works a few times a day until they've had their fill of that and would prefer to fly around and wreak havoc than get more scratches or cuddling.
Flight requires far more energy than all the behaviors flightless parrots do combined. So it is no wonder that flighted parrots are reluctant to fly for things they aren't highly motivated for getting!
The fact that I can often get my parrots to do more flights than the calories I reward them with must attest to either the effectiveness of my training or the affinity of my parrots. I'm no biologist but I think it's not an unreasonable guess that over a mile of stop and go flight takes a lot more energy than what is provided by 4 sunflower seeds.
The problem is that if depending strictly on praise, petting, cuddling, and let's even add toys to that equation, I could only keep my parrots focused on being with me or at least not doing something bad for only about 15-30 minutes of the day. I can shower them or take them out when they are sleepy for another 30-60 minutes of peaceful out time. However, there is no way to keep them out for hours without them being bad (bad includes landing on places they aren't supposed to be or attacking each other, etc) with just those means. Clippers wouldn't understand this because when they put their parrot down on a stand, it stays on the stand cause it has no other place it can go. So by keeping my birds hungry during out of cage time (once again before someone accuses me of starving them, I am talking about having them out within the last hours before they get their meal and normal caloric intake rather than purposefully making them so hungry that they are powerless), I can keep them more focused on doing good behavior for the mere possibility of getting food that way rather than necessarily making them work for food. Yes, food management for formal trick training is very helpful if not required. However, for general parrot management for out of cage time in a human home, letting it happen during the time when they are getting hungry in preparation of meal time, keeps them focused enough that they can respect some rules established on the basis of positive reinforcement.
And no, trick training is not the only thing I do with my parrots. I just put more effort into videoing and showcasing the tricks because it is more interesting/amusing/helpful to my viewers. This doesn't mean that I don't just take my parrots for walks or play with them at home. There will be long periods of time when I'm too busy or don't feel like working on tricks. I don't really post videos of together time with parrots because frankly I think it's boring to watch and it's kind of personal. But in order to enjoy personal cuddle time with a parrot and be able to give it out of cage time without physically handicapping it, this is the only way I have found to be successful. If there are other owners of unhandicapped parrots that don't have a bird room and let their parrots fly in their house have better ways of managing them, I would be absolutely thrilled to learn about them. I don't have any trouble with trick training, diet, cuddling, biting, and other common issues people may discuss. Those are all manageable. But the flight aspect of a parrot is a whole other thing and by far the most challenging aspect of owning a parrot.
I don't know how many times I can say it, but I am not talking about trick training at all here. I am not telling everyone to trick train. I am not talking about food management for the purpose of trick training. I am talking about the most basic food management for keeping parrots well behaved in the human household environment. While the things they try to do would be perfectly suitable for the wild, they are destructive and potentially dangerous in our households. This is why proper management of their behavior is necessary. Most people choose to blame the bird for this and clip its wings rather than accept the challenge or working with the bird to alleviate this. Managing flight has become the leading challenge of my parrot ownership in order to make all remaining pleasant aspects of parrot ownership possible. Without managing flight, there can't be cuddling and all the other fun stuff. Just because you cut your birds wings to force it to interact with you, doesn't mean it chose to.
Manipulating the timing of feeding (as well as type of food like boring food in cage, treats when out) is one of the least harmful or intrusive ways of controlling a parrot. It still has the choice of whether or not to listen or come to the owner but it is more likely to decide to go with it because some element of desire for the food is present. We don't have access to food all day long and neither should our birds. When we go to school, work, trips, etc, we eat during meal times and then do other things. Children eat when their parents say it's time to eat. I can't understand why anyone would think it should be different for birds. Birds have a crop so withholding food for some reasonable period between feedings ensures that their digestive system is never without food but they feel the urge to replenish their reserve by the time you have them out. This is very effective and yet quite harmless. Clipping on the other hand is bordering on animal abuse. It causes extensive physical and psychological harm to birds whose physiology is evolved for flight.
Most people are too impatient, irresponsible, busy, uncaring, selfish, inconfident, or ignorant that they chose to blame the parrot and screw it out of the ability to fly rather than to make some kind of changes in themselves or their household to make it possible. The sacrifices to let parrots fly in their home will vary greatly for different people and households to be sure. But it is always for the benefit of the owner rather than the parrot that they end up getting clipped. I know someone will somewhere find an exception case of some injured or psychologically screwed up parrot that causes too much harm to itself with flight and needs to be kept clipped and I can understand those rare cases. However, for the rest of you who clip, please do not pass judgment on the methods by which I manage my parrots when you decided to clip your parrots to solve flight problems rather than finding ways of convincing them to cooperate with you. You chose to use a far more harmful method to manage your parrots flighted misbehaviors by clipping than timing their food.
I'm not out to tell people not to clip. I have come to accept that most people can't/won't do otherwise. However, I will not accept people telling me that they have a perfect handle on their parrot's behavior without using food management when they used a far more abusive/extreme method by clipping them. I challenge someone with a flighted parrot larger than a cockatiel to tell me how they deal with their parrot flying all about, causing damage, refusing to come, attacking other birds or people, etc without having to use food management, excessive caging, or a separate room?
PS Over feeding a couch potato (clipped parrot) is probably more detrimental health wise than a flighted parrot. Ironic isn't it that the parrots that can afford the extra calories (flighted) need to have their food managed whereas the ones who get insufficient exercise get way too much food?