I doubt that's going to solve anything because you're not willing to take any of the measures that could solve it. Clipping curbs the expression of it rather than solving the actual problem. You refuse to accept what works for some sort of pride or I don't know what. I'm not pushing anything, I'm just telling you what works. It's not just because it works for me (although this is a reason I'm confident to share it). I didn't come up with it. I read about it from other trainers and owners. I've talked to people who've done it and watched their videos. I really have no idea why people are so opposed to some very basic food management (like 2 unlimited feedings daily). Are people really too lazy to remember to take it in and out and commit to making sure they can make it home to feed? Do people forget to come home to feed their children? I really can't understand what the fundamental opposition to food scheduling into meals is when it is natural, healthy, and solves behavioral issues.
So as I was starting to say about your scenario about flying at women that you presented. If I were trying to solve that issue, I would not clip the parrot because it wouldn't solve it. Instead I would start with implementing food management. Mild at first but stepping it up as needed (
refer to what I posted to another topic for establishing food management and optimizing it). Target training and teaching a couple tricks makes the next steps easier. Next I would do
flight recall training if the bird isn't already reliable at recalling on cue. No this isn't just a cutesy show trick, it has very practical application. It teaches the bird to fly to YOU. When the bird gets very very used to flying to you, it will revert to flying and landing on you in face of danger rather than attacking it or fleeing in some other manner. The routine and practice of flying to the trainer just makes it a natural thing to do in those other situations.
While the above steps are going on, I would begin having said unliked women spend time in the room where the cage is (or bring cage to them or bird in carrier to them) without any interaction at all. First keeping the caged bird far away and going about normal personal interaction and then working it so unliked people or just women in general are closer and closer to the cage going about their things. As long as the bird isn't freaking out in the cage, all this action can be brought closer and closer progressively. Once it is at the point that other people can stand right by the cage/carrier and the parrot isn't freaking out, they can begin offering treats to the parrot through the bars. If it won't take it, they can drop it in an empty bowl in the cage for a non-contact handoff. Once the parrot does take treats from strangers in cage, the strangers can target the parrot around cage for a treat. Since the parrot is in a cage, it does not have the opportunity to fly at these people while learning how only good things happen around these kinds of people (like women). Eventually steps I show in my
taming guide can be taken where the owner targets the parrot onto a handheld perch, glove, or bare hand of the kinds of people it is said not to like. If over time it is taught to like them because they are the provider of all things good and nothing bad, it will have far less reason to fly and attack them.
So as you can see, you can either pretend like nothing is wrong and blame me, blame the bird, clip its wings, and essentially not solve the root of the problem which will come back when the wings do, or you can come up with a rational plan to deal with your birds insecurities and change things so the things once seen as bad can be very positive instead.
Grey_Moon wrote:Personally, I would not be ok with knowing that the only reason my parrots interacted with me or behaved would be because they were in whatever capacity hungry.
So you're saying you'd rather the parrot interact with you because it is forced to by either clipping or punishment? When it is done for food it is not forced. They have the choice to refuse and sometimes do. Refusing doesn't mean they won't get to eat, it just means they won't get to eat right that moment and have to wait until meal time. If besides sleep, food is the thing parrots spend the most time seeking in the wild, what other things should it be "well behaved and interact with you for?"
Grey_Moon wrote:For example, my hen timneh is not allowed on the floor---because she usually gets broody, territorial and aggressive.
And if you didn't overfeed her, there would be less broody, territorial, and aggressive behavior. Funny how no one actually reads my explanations. In the wild, parrots don't begin breeding behavior until resources are plentiful. If you can keep them in that sub-plentiful but healthy dosage for most of the time, you can reduce hormonal behavior. They cannot lay eggs without the extra nutrition needed beyond their own needs to lay and incubate the eggs. By keeping the food at a level that it's always enough for the single parrot but not enough for the other activities, you greatly dissuade them from occurring naturally. Despite explaining this countless times in my posts, people still just say they ignore what I say because they don't feel like teaching tricks. Funny that the people who could benefit most from a bit of food regulation are the ones most opposed to using it.
Grey_Moon wrote:For example, if one had a bird that was extremely aggressive and flew to attack people. This bird and its family are in danger of creating negative habits and bad patterns. I would rather see this bird clipped and worked with and a repair of this relationship---than to preserve flight.
Clipping the parrot would NOT repair the relationship. It would merely break its wings.
Grey_Moon wrote:Is it crueler to disallow flight or to have to send that bird away from all its ever known just because its 'cruel' in your opinion not to allow it to fly?
It is cruel to clip the wings sooner than to stop being lazy and actually work with your bird a little to solve the problems.