It's funny how the birds are reacting to the training and training menu. (: We haven't done new stuff because mama was gone for a week and then sick. However, we have continued training every day. The diet of bird-kibble and wet-bowl in the morning (fruits,vegetables, and sometimes scrambled eggs) continues. AMAZINGLY, all 4 birds are more interested in their healthy food now that I'm not stuffing them with treats all day long. In addition, it is so much easier on me! ALSO, all of the birds run to their breakfast bowls now instead of looking at them like they were filled with dog-food. Makes me happier and them, I think!
We continue to shower the birds, one a day, throughout the week.
Lucy (CAG) is happy and glad to do stuff to get treats, seeds, nuts, and praise. She doesn't exhibit the impatience she did at the beginning. "Mama touch" is getting better and better. It's still hard for her, but now I make her "not pull away" in order to get the treat.
Graice (TAG-11) is a pill and cute as a button! She has learned to make an exact copy of the clicker sounds. Hard not to laugh. She's doing turn around quickly now and "mama touch" is (every time) easy for her.
Bobby is still a basket case. I started having him step up (that has improved as long as he's inside his cage) and then I draw him to me and count to ten before I click, return him to the perch, and give him a treat. In the beginning, he was too nervous to even step up with both feet!!! (I've started counting to 10 by counting very slowly sometimes, stretching out his time of self-control, ie non-panic!)
Coco, the spoiled one: He has never bitten me again and doesn't show any aggression toward the chop stick anymore. He won't step up in the morning without a treat (husband says he's not a morning-person-bird) and refuses to step out almost all day long...without treating him. I go in, offer my hand, and when he refuses I simply withdraw. Occasionally he will step up and when he does, he gets to come to the living room, sit in the window perch, and eat a nutriberry seed ball. He's a space-case-cockatoo about turn around, loves "mama touch," and we have gotten him to (more than accidentally) say "hello" in response to my "hello!"
Conclusion of training so far:
-Aggression has disappeared from Coco.
-Lucy is improving steadily in her trust of the touch.
-Bobby understands that "10" means he gets a treat.
-Gracie is blossoming and eats almost as much bird food as she throws down to the floor.
New update next week.
Showing posts with label parrot. Show all posts
Showing posts with label parrot. Show all posts
Saturday, November 12, 2011
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Teaching old parrots new tricks or teaching old pet owner new tricks.
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Lucy, 5 years old |
Timneh African Grey (Bobby) is 6 years old. He's been with us from the "pre-feather" stage. He knows a few tricks like, giving kisses, waving, turning around, flapping his wings, and the best... meowing when I ask him what a kitty says. He has gone "phobic" on us and is frightened of everything. He still does his tricks for treats. He whistles, but doesn't talk.
Timneh African Grey (Gracie) is about 10 or 11. She talks a little, makes awful squeaky sounds, bites men, and makes blowing your nose sound when you reach for a tissue. She flaps her wings on command and gives kisses. We adopted her about 18 months ago. We adore Gracie.
Lucy (shown above) is a 5 year old Congo African Grey. She whistles, talks, and (reluctantly) does the same tricks like wave, flap, kiss, turn around, (used to) sound like a chicken when you asked her to. She is stubborn, smart, funny, and bites when she is frustrated... which is often if she doesn't get her own way. She can whistle part of the Adams' Family tune, 76 trombones, the Marine Corps Hymn, and more I can't remember. She talks a lot, but could really improve her interaction. Her favorite word of late, "water."
Lastly, there is Coco. He is a 6 year old lesser sulfur crested cockatoo that we adopted 4 years ago. He says some small things, but has become very stubborn with age and sometimes refuses to step up. He bit me the other day... and he bit his bird sitter that he loves. He was upset and we both cried. ): It just isn't like Coco to be like that. He doesn't want to eat anything except sunflower seeds and gets really grumpy when they aren't provided.
Bottom line: My birds get the best cages, light, water (filtered) and best bird food. They get out of their cages every day onto a huge stand I built. I cook warm food for their breakfast and have given them loads of fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds in addition to their "bird food." The "bird food" usually ends up on the floor. It's time my spoiled birdie-children went to school and learned some manners. I've been weaning them off the "treats" and getting them used to "bird food" and fresh foods. I've ordered some bird training guides and I've already started. This blog is about the progress.
9/27/11 The Timnehs (TAG) both took well to target training. I "loaded" the clicker with good vibrations by giving the bird a sunflower seen and simultaneously clicking the clicker. The morning lesson included only this: Treat/click.... treat/click.... treat click. In the afternoon, I added a little wooden stick. The TAGs easily, curiously, touched the stick. When they did, CLICK, and they got a seed. Three seeds and they were veterans! Coco refused the sunflower seed all morning. He was hungry, but refused to take it. (He is like that!) Lucy (CAG) got mad, grabbed the seed and threw it on the floor. I walked away and continued training on the TAGs.
9/28/11 The TAG's both consider themselves veteran target trainees! :D Although Bobby is scared of his own shadow, he seems to understand touch-the-stick-get-a-seed quite well. I stretch him a little bit by having him outside of his cage and he did target/treat 3 times before freaking out... at which point, I just let him alone. BREAKTHROUGH with Lucy this afternoon. She allowed me to present-the-seed with a click in her cage this morning without throwing a tantrum, so I put her on the bird stand and UPPED the anti on the treat. PEANUT BUTTER on a spoon! OMG! First I did treat/click at the same time a couple of times and then I present the stick. She daintily reached out with that big beak and only just touched the stick (she broke on end yesterday!) and then got her peanut butter bite. We repeated this 5 or 6 times. She is so darn smart and so darn stubborn! She knew exactly what I wanted. COCO is holding out. He's drowning "bird food" and trying to get filled up. I know he wants a sunflower seed... but he twists his head away from my hand and refuses to take it. I have yet to give him a seed with a click... I won't give up. Cockatoos are ultra smart. Tomorrow is a new day.
Ordered training materials. Must set aside an hour or so every day just for training. This is gonna be fun!
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