Sunday, September 9, 2007

Training your Bird


If the only animal training you have done in the past has been with a dog then you need to stop right now and rethink everything you know about animal training! Dogs have been domesticated for thousands of years. Most birds have never been "domesticated" Dogs are always looking to the leader of the pack, following his or her lead and trying to please them. Parrots on the other hand see themselves as your equal. Their greatest pleasure is not to do exactly what you say when you say it in hopes of pleasing their "pack leader". They are constantly trying to figure out ways to control YOU, through their behaviours and actions. Unlike dogs they don't work to please you, they work to please themselves. SO in order to teach your bird a few desirable behaviours you need to work at being smarted than he is and convincing him that it was his idea in the first place!

Bird trainers use food as a reward, which is one of the things birds care about most. Because of this you should probably schedule training sessions before feeding your feathered friend. That way he will be extra motivated to receive the treat or reward that you give him. I will include a list of training rewards in the next blog post.

Assuming you are starting out with a handfed bird that is already reasonably tame, how can you teach your bird a few tricks? Positive reinforcement is the trick. So long as you are careful never to teach the bird something that could jeopardize his health, tricks can only increase your enjoyment of your bird and the amount of time you spend together.

The first step in teaching any kind of trick is to notice a natural behaviour that can be modified easily into a trick. You may notice that your bird loves to push his food around in his dish before he eats it. If so then your bird has already started doing a fun little trick, it is just up to you to teach him to modify it a bit, and make it more elaborate. You can buy a little wooden parrot wagon (often available at larger pet stores that carry a good selection of bird toys) or you can use a little die-cast hot wheels type car, and teach him to transfer the pushing habit onto the toy by loading it down with a little bit of food. You can offer him a reward or treat (see list of treats as training aids in next article), when he gets the behaviour you want right. And don't forget to name the trick . For example say "Push the wagon (car)" every time he does it. Soon he will learn to do this on command. Remember that treats such as sunflower seeds work great as training rewards but can be very fattening so they should not constitute the basis of your birds diet! After a time your bird will begin to push without the benefit of the wagon or car having any food on it.

In the beginning it might take a while for you and your bird to really learn to communicate. But once your bird learns that acting a certain way both makes brings a reward and gives him extra attention from you, his flock mate, he will get much faster at learning new tricks. Learning to preform tricks can also help chronic pluckers. Sometimes birds that pluck are just plain bored! They often become the best performers, and the plucking is alleviated as a by-product of having something new to do.

Teaching "Stick 'em up" is also quite easy. When you first take your bird out of its cage they will often stretch their wings straight up over their heads. When he does this point your finger at him (like a gun) and say "Stick 'em up" or "Put 'em up". After a week or two of doing this every time you see the bird stretch he will start to do it on command. If you find it helps you can offer a reward, but for a trick this easy to learn it is often not necessary.





Some other tricks that are easy modifications of normal parrot behaviour include:

  • Offering a foot to shake hands
  • Hopping (dancing or pretending to be wind-up toy)

  • Bobbing its head(Answering yes)
  • Raising its crest

  • Flapping its wings (soaring like eagle, escaping the police, etc.)

  • Swinging head side to side (saying no)

  • Stomping feet (dancing)

  • Hanging from feet or beak from its perch or your hands. (acrobatics, or swinging upside down)

  • Lying on its back (play dead, or roll over)

This is not a comprehensive list of tricks that your pet parrot could learn, the sky (and your patience) is the limit. Playing with his natural tendencies and coordinating them with your verbal commands, you can find a virtually limitless repertoire within your bird's natural behaviour. We have all seen macaws dunking basketballs, and cockatoos roller-skating. Be sure to be on the look out, the next time you go shopping for parrot toys, for things to use as props in making your parrot's performance "Star Quality" And don't forget to make it fun! Keep your lessons short 10 to 30 minutes. You can have more than one training session per day, if you would like to reinforce the day's lesson and progress faster. Most importantly always end each session on a positive note. End with a behaviour that your parrot can do well and will earn your praise and a reward.







Food Rewards for Training your Performing Parrot

If you have thought hard and you're not sure what treat your pet bird likes, then you need to create a desire in your parrot to have a certain treat. Start by offering a small amount of the treat food with the parrots regular food each day. When you see the bird beginning to eat the treat before he goes to his regular food you have done it! Now you can stop offering the treat with the bird's regular meals, and only use it as a reward during training sessions.



  • Walnuts (halves or pieces)

  • unsweetened cereal

  • toast cubes

  • pepper flakes

  • pumpkin seeds

  • sunflower seeds

  • popcorn (without butter & salt)

  • pasta (cooked or raw)

  • papaya

  • oatmeal

  • millet

  • hard boiled egg

  • peanut halves

  • grapes (or half grapes)

  • granola

  • crackers

  • cornflakes

  • chopped apple

  • cantaloupe

  • cabbage

  • coleslaw

  • carrot (grated or chopped)

  • celery

  • broccoli

  • banana

Thursday, September 6, 2007

The seven top dangers to pet parrots.


The top 7 killers of pet parrots according to avian veterinarians include the following:

1. Other animals. Parrots can sustain fatal injuries by being bitten, clawed, pounced on, shaken, or chased by your faithful pooch, or cuddly kitten. Dogs and cats and other animals can kill your bird either by the bacteria in their saliva, or by causing severe injuries that result in toxic shock. Avian vets recommend that if your bird has been attacked or teased by another animal, always assume that your pet has been bitten and seek veterinary assistance immediately!

2. Unclipped wings. If you don't have your birds wings properly clipped, it can end up flying out of an open door or window and be lost forever. Or it can fly into glass windows, ceiling fans, into the fireplace, onto hot stove-tops, into the toilet, or aquarium and drown. Be extra cautious with small streamlined birds, like cockatiels and budgies. It often only takes one or two long flight feathers for them to be able to gain altitude.

3. Toxic fumes. Non-stick cookware is one of the biggest culprits here. The PTFE or polytetraflouroethylene in Teflon or non-stick cookware can be released as a gas while cooking, causing death. (By the way, does anyone remember the use of canaries in mine shafts to detect deadly gases? If this stuff can kill our birds just like that do we really want to be using it in our home around our precious families?) Many household aerosol products, such as hairspray, deodorant, and perfume can also cause respiratory problems.

4. Secondhand smoke. By inhaling smoke from a cigarette, cigar, or pipe, your bird (and/or dog and cat) just like people, can develop eye problems, skin irritation and respiratory disease.

5. Trauma. If your parrot is out of his cage unsupervised, he is in grave danger of being stepped on, sat on, crushed in a closing door, or rolled over on. He even runs the risk of being sucked up into the vacuum! For some reason conures and caiques seem especially prone to being stepped on, maybe because of their natural curiosity, and love of exploring new places (like under the sofa or reclining chair).

6. Toxic food or plants. There are several foods that are known toxins for birds, chocolate, caffeine, avocado, and onions are all things that should be avoided at all costs! There are also many toxic houseplants that you should keep out of your house or at least away from your birds. I will include a list of known plants to avoid and those that are safe in my next post.

7. Water. Your parrot can die of water deprivation due to a malfunctioning water bottle. For this reason, water cup that is tip proof is a better choice for birds. Even though it will need to be cleaned much more frequently. Be sure that if he is able to bathe in his bowl, that all the water isn't splashed out in the process. Budgies (parakeets) and lovebirds are particularly enthusiastic bathers!


Monday, September 3, 2007

My Peachface Mystery Baby

Click on to these pictures to see larger version! I was recently given a pair of Peachface lovebirds. I have no idea what their genetic make-up is . The folks who gave them to me had no information other than they "thought they were fairly young breeders, but had never laid eggs" for them. (I don't know if the pair is related in any way)

The male "looks" like a normal peachface, and the female "looks" like a normal colored pied. Within 45 days of getting them home, they were hatching their first clutch.








That first clutch of 3 turned out to be 2 dutch blue babies and one dutch blue pied.

Now the same pair has hatched out three more babies. I just pulled them today to start handfeeding. the oldest is about 2 weeks and the youngest is about 11 days old. Since he hatched the youngest has been covered over his entire body by bright orange down!
I have never seen another peachface baby that color. The middle chick has mostly normal color (yellowish-white) down, with a few strands of orange. The oldest (who is getting enough pin feathers to tell me he will be pied) has mostly normal colored down but, on his head is the same bright tangerine color!
Feel free to post a comment if you want to venture an (educated) guess as to what color-mutation might develop!
P.S. I was recently asked if the parent birds could have been feeding them something that might cause this color to develop, or if their bedding could have possibly "stained" them. No to both! They hatched that way! And the parent's diet pre-mating, during egg laying, and after chick's hatch, doesn't include that much beta carotene etc. to affect a color change.