Other People Posing Risks to Your Birds

 October 28th, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

Even if you are very careful with your own birds and make all necessary precautions to keep smoke, teflon, chocolate, avacado, and other deadly substances away from your bird, it’s a whole other story if you have unfamiliar people involved.

In my household everything is basically bird proof and I begin to take it for granted. I don’t have any teflon pans, no avacados, chocloate is put away, no ceiling fans, no toxis plants, controlled drafts, bathroom doors always closed, two doors to go outside of the house, no other pets, etc. I have all the necessary precautions for living with a flighted bird safely.

I started to realize the important of remembering what kinds of precautions are necessary again when I started taking my birds to other people’s houses for visits. What really got me thinking about it was when I saw other people using teflon pans. Because I got rid of all of mine, I no longer even think if pans are safe or not for birds. But in other people’s houses I have to make better precautions with my birds like leaving them outside while folks are cooking and watching that the pans are not overheated.

Here are some other concerns to keep in mind if you take your bird to other people’s houses or have other people visit you. For some reason or another it seems like people are obsessed with sneaking food to your pet. They think they are doing it a favor. Yet they don’t know what they are giving it and what kind of diet the bird is on etc. They may have seen you feed food from the table to the bird and try to do that too. Who knows when someone may decide to sneak a chocolate chip cookie over to your bird thinking that polly must love cookies. Or they could just be interrupting your training diet or food regime.

Some people like to try to pet your bird through the bars or when it is out not realizing it will bite them. Some people might decide your bird is lonely in its carrier and let it out only to have it fly all over the place or cause trouble. Other times you might just run into issues like the other person’s house having mirrors that confuse the bird, ceiling fans, or other things that it may not be used to in a “bird safe” environment. The whole point of taking it to the stranger’s house is to socialize it and desensitize it to things like this but it is important to do so slowly and in a controlled manner.

It is not always possible or practical to try to educate everyone that is near your bird so it’s just more important to keep the bird near you at all times. Unlike in your own household you cannot change the environment or lifestyle to suit your birds so it is important to be aware of the dangers and keeping your birds away from them.

If you’re visiting a household with a lot of people or people who are too nosy, you might want to go to the further precaution of putting a lock on the carrier, and putting some signs on your carrier like “Do not feed” and “Don’t stick fingers inside of cage, bird bites.” I just know from some of my outings with my birds that if they weren’t under my immediate attention all the time, the people I was visiting might have messed around them the wrong way too much.

Warning: You should always take your bird outside on a harness or tether unless it has been properly trained for outside un-tethered interaction by a professional.

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Cutting Budgie Nails

 October 14th, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

Cutting budgie nails is not very difficult and can be done by the bird owner with some knowledge and preparation. There are a few items you will need before you proceed. You will want to have a brand new nail clipper that you will only use for your birds. Using a dull or well used clipper will only prolong and complicate the trimming process.

You should not clip your bird’s nails if you don’t have a styptic powder like quick stop ready. If you cut the nails too deep the bird will bleed and if the blood is not stopped, the bird will bleed to death. So not only have the powder available but have it open and ready to use.

Grab and hold the budgie in the palm of your hand. If you have a helper to do this, the process is significantly easier. Hold the bird steady and hold the toenail to cut away from the other toes. Budgie feet are really small so it is important to hold the toes apart to prevent them coming near the blades.

Observe the bloodline on the nails and cut the nail before the bloodline so that it does not bleed. Place the trimmer around that nail and make one final check that the blades are lined up correctly and other toes are out of the way. Now squeeze and clip the nail. If the nail starts bleeding, dab some quick stop on the area and it should clot within 15 seconds.

Proceed to trim the remainder of the nails in the same way.

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Teaching Parrots Petting Etiquette

 October 9th, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

If you have a brand new bird that is not accustomed to petting or if yours loves it and is demanding about it, here are some tips for you.

If your bird does not let you pet it doesn’t mean you can’t use a little bit of training to allow you to do it. There is no guarantee whether your bird will like it or not. There is a good chance that it will but needs to give you the chance to do it. If you try to force pet a fearful or aggressive bird, it will only worsen the situation. Of course you may feel that if you just do it, the bird can enjoy it but the fact of the matter is that if you do it in an unpleasant way, the bird will never trust you like that.

One thing to consider is scale. While you may be able to use your entire hand on a macaw, only a few fingers would be more suitable for a Senegal Parrot. On the other hand, with a budgie even one finger can seem large and intimidating. Scale wise a finger might be like getting pet with a first for a budgie. So definitely try to not be too big to the bird when you touch it.

It is likely that the bird does not want to be touched on its wings, legs, or tail. They can preen/scratch all of those areas themselves so they don’t need or want your touch there. However, they cannot reach their own heads and necks. In the wild birds all preen each other as both a convenience and a socialization ritual. Usually birds allow others to preen them as a sign of social acceptance. So of course your bond with the bird can be reinforced by petting its head and neck.

So if you have never pet your bird before, you will want to see how close you can get and try to see if it will accept petting or not. What I often do with a bird I’m unfamiliar with is put my hand about 12 inches over its head and see if it is calm or really agitated. Unless the bird looks like its ready to bite, I will inch in a little at a time and see its comfort level. If it looks more relaxed, I go a bit closer. Within the last few inches is the deciding point. Now it can reach your hand and bite you. If the bird’s head is still down, it is most likely safe to proceed. If it’s beak is practically on your hands then a bite is likely and continuing will only agitate the bird and it won’t be able to enjoy being pet.

One way I’ve taught birds to accept petting initially (to introduce them to it so they could realize they like it) is by cuing them to do a trick. While I am rewarding the bird for doing the trick I hold my hand closer and closer to its head with consecutive rewards. So on the first reward, while the bird is eating out of my left hand, I will put my right hand a certain distance away that the bird does not get distracted and continues eating. If the bird keeps looking at my hand rather then eating, then it is uncomfortable and I back off a little. I continue this until I can get close enough to touch and the first few times I just touch and don’t pet. Finally once I can definitely touch while it is eating, I start gently stroking the feathers. Once the bird seems more comfortable with petting while being fed, I start phasing out the feeding and just offering petting on occasion.

Now on the other side of the spectrum is a parrot the likes getting pet so much that it will bite you until you do it. This is unacceptable behavior and absolutely should not be rewarded with the action the parrot desires. In this case I try to change the petting request language from bite to a trick behavior. For instance cue the parrot to wave and when it does, you reward it with some head petting. Not only does this give you an alternate treat to use to food, it also teaches the parrot to do tricks instead of biting to get pet.

In this video you can also see that I created a pseudo cue for accepting petting for my parrot. I had two issues with her. First off, she would nip my fingers if I didn’t pet her the way she wanted. Second, I often get requests from children to pet her and even if she looks like she will let them, I am worried about her changing her mind and biting them. So what I started to do is to hold her beak whenever I pet her. She wants the petting so she doesn’t mind the beak hold but for me it guarantees that she can’t nip me because I got her. Now when I let others pet her, I hold her beak. This way I know that she can’t bite and if anything it will be me and not a little child petting her.

Usually I either lean the thumb of the same hand I pet her with on top of her beak or I hold her beak between my fingers on the hand she is perches on. This guarantees me that she won’t nip or bite and also it signals to her that enjoyable petting is on its way for her. This way when I want to give other people an opportunity to pet her, I just hold her beak. This signals to the bird that she is going to be pet and takes her mind and worry off that stranger because I just told her that petting is coming and not harm. She lets them pet her and probably won’t bite them because she knows a good thing is coming. And as backup, I got her beak so I know exactly where it is!

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Initially Getting Bird Into Cage

 October 6th, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

So you just bought your first bird at the pet store, breeder, or adoption center. You get home and you wonder how the heck do I get it from the box/carrier. Or you let you already had your bird in the cage and you let it out but don’t know how to get it back in. For people with training relationships with their birds we always recommend targeting them out of the cage or into the cage. These methods work great with a bird that has done it a few times. But if your bird isn’t yet target trained and you got it out using methods from my previous post, this one is to tell you how to get it back in.

If you are trying to get your new bird from a carrier/box into its new cage, obviously you cannot expect it to know what it is or go there on its own. If it’s a new bird, odds are it is not yet target trained and this is not the time to try to train it to target to get it into the cage. Luring it into the cage with food will not work either. Frightened birds are unlikely to eat for a while so your food will do little to help it overcome its fears of the new environment. Have the cage set up, open, and ready to go for the bird before getting it out.

If the bird is step up trained, this shouldn’t be so difficult. Reach your hand toward the birds legs and nudge gently under its belly until it steps up. If the bird is aggressive, you can use a stick for the bird to step on in the same fashion. When you get the bird out of the carrier bring it in close to your body so that it has fewer escape options and if you can even cup your second hand around it so it doesn’t try to fly off of you or fall. Come up to the cage and reach the bird inside and bring it in toward a perch and let the perch be just above its legs so it can step up.

On the other hand if the bird is not step up trained you are going to have to grab it in order to transfer it to the cage. Particularly with smaller birds, a good way to do it is to use both hands to cup the bird between to prevent escape and then scoop and grab into one hand. If your bird is bitey, you can hold your thumb just under its beak to pin its head back so it cannot bite you while you carry it. Bring it into the cage and turn it so its feet can grasp the perch you place it on as you release.

Finally if you just let your bird out or it got out of its carrier before you could get it in the cage, you will have to combine calm caution with action. If the bird is clipped, most likely it ends up on the floor. Chasing it will only panic the bird and cause it to try to fly more and exhaust it. Instead, you should slowly creep up to the bird without scaring it and slowly get as close as you can to it and then make a swift and decisive grab. Lingering the last part will let the bird get away which will only cause more drama and more fright/exhaustion for the bird so your ability to sneak up and get it will help alleviate the situation.

You can also try toweling the bird. Get in the vicinity of the bird with a towel in hand and drop it like a net over your bird to stop it from getting further away and hurting itself. Then scoop the towel with the bird in it and bring it to its cage. You see all the target training, positive reinforcement stuff you can start later but first you have to get the bird back in the cage and let it calm down and get used to you and your house. I hope that once you have gotten your bird into or out of the cage for the first time you will use the opportunity to begin training through positive reinforcement so that you wouldn’t have to use these methods again!

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Initially Getting Bird Out of Cage

 October 2nd, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

I have heard several people asking about how to get a bird out of the cage initially just to get to the point of target training and trick training. I do realize that this is a major issue for a first time bird owner. I had gone through this myself when I got my first bird and it must have been a week or two since owning it till I took it out for the first time. This article is for all those people at the very early stages of bird ownership that want to know how to get the bird out of the cage for the first time so they can begin to interact with it and train it.

Budgie stepping up to come out of cage

Budgie stepping up to come out of cage

Now before I get further into this, I want to say that this is merely my personal opinion based on personal experience. Some may disagree with me and suggest other ways and that is just fine. I just want you to know that this technique proved successful for me with 3 separate birds to get them to be willing to come out onto my hand within one month or less. However, this experience was with 3 different baby birds from a store. If you are working with a rescue, rehomed, or older bird these techniques may or may not apply and use at your own discretion. If anyone has had success or failure with similar technique on birds of any of those categories, please feel free to leave a comment detailing how it went.

Basically there are 3 things that the bird could do if you reach your hand into its cage:

1) Run away (flapping, crashing into cage walls, running, etc)

2) Bite (ouch, blood, pain)

3) Step onto your hand

Naturally we all want the third outcome but if you have never opened your birds cage and tried you will never know which of these 3 cases your bird is. And if you don’t know which of these your bird is, you cannot know how to proceed. There is a good chance that the bird already knows how to step up or is tame enough to be grabbed that you don’t really have to do much to get it out of the cage. Seriously!

I’ve been going back to the birdstore where I bought my 2 recent birds and check out the birds they have. I go around to the different tanks/cages they keep the birds in and reach my hand in to see what their reaction is and see if they will step up. Many birds have been taught to step up and tamed to hands/humans by their breeder and just the site of your finger will trigger them to step up. Sometimes I get bit, sometimes the bird runs away, sometimes it steps up. Often times it seems to be species specific. Every Senegal I’ve ever tried to pick up at that store stepped up for me no problem (that is probably the same reason I bought Kili from there) but on the other hand the sun conures always bite me. I don’t know if its a certain vibe I have with certain kinds of birds (perhaps they step up for other kinds of people) but I do know that there is an approach to grasping every kind of bird. If you haven’t tried picking up your bird yet, I highly recommend you just give it a try. If you don’t get lucky and have a step up off the bat, at least you’ll know what kind of bird you are dealing with. And don’t just assume that it won’t step up or want to come to you if you’ve never done it, you must try first.

If bird is a stepper, just proceed with taming and training.

Sometimes you just have to grab bird out of cage and then make the out of cage experience super rewarding until it can learn to step up.

Sometimes you just have to grab bird out of cage and then make the out of cage experience super rewarding until it can learn to step up.

If bird is a biter, and you are genuinely afraid of handling the bird, refer to my biting article series.  But if you have a baby bird or are not afraid of the bite it might give you (particularly if it’s a baby or small bird like a budgie) you may use a combination of flooding with positive reinforcement. This is actually the technique I used on all my birds. What I discovered at the store was that the bird handlers at stores are pretty rough with the birds so they are pretty used to being grabbed and handled. They may test you with a bite to see if it scares you or not but may not persist if you don’t give up. So if you just reach in and grab your bird despite biting efforts and overpower it to get it out of the cage, you will be showing it that whether it puts up a fight or not, you will get it out eventually so give up biting. This of course can be detrimental to your relationship with the bird so I like to outweigh the negative association with positive immediately. I give the bird its favorite treats immediately. Take it out, play with it, train it target and other tricks. I make being out of the cage a really good experience. Of course if you do this so rough, you may traumatize your bird and it will be forever afraid of you. It is important to understand balance. However, the worst thing you could possibly do is to make an attempt to get it out of its cage and prolong for a long duration of time and ultimately fail at getting it out. If you take a minute, 5 minutes trying to get the bird out of the cage and it is biting and you are pulling your hands away and trying over again, you will only reinforce biting behavior and create a nightmare for yourself. If you are going to reach in and grab the bird, just do it. After doing this just a few times with my birds and the positive training outside the cage, within a few days there were stepping up to come out and within weeks were always eager to be taken out.

If your bird is terrified of you (and I’m not saying a little shy, I’m talking running scared like there’s no tomorrow), you can apply a similar approach to above but with some modification. You definitely have to give such a bird time to relax and get to know that you are safe. This could be a matter of minutes or a matter of weeks depending on the bird. While I think an aggressive bird could gain a respect for some toughness on the part of the owner, a scared bird will only get more scared. So it is important to give it more time to get used to you and realize that you will not cause harm. Even if it is not stepping up yet, if it calms down and perhaps takes treats through the bars from you, you are ready to apply techniques similar to a biting bird.

One last note. I do not recommend ever letting your bird out of its cage on its own. I know there are many people who just open the cage and let the bird climb out by itself and eventually go in by itself. If you want to have a tame bird, never do this. In my household, the only way a bird ever gets to come out of its cage is by stepping onto my hand. No step up, no out. Climbing out by itself, mean going back to cage and staying there. Thus my birds are conditioned to station on a perch and wait between when I open the door and reach my hand in and not jump/fly out. In fact I don’t even let the birds cling to the cage door to be let out. This discipline ensures that you maintain some control over the bird but also associates the positive association to you for being allowed to come out rather than just the door miraculously popping open!

Of course once you get your bird out of the cage for the first time, you will also have to get it back into the cage at some point. In my next article I will talk about how to get a new bird back into the cage.

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Teaching Small Birds to Wave

 September 28th, 2009
Posted By:
Mike
Mike

Who said Budgies couldn’t wave? If a budgie can be taught to wave, then I am certain that so can other parakeets, lovebirds, parrotlets, and cockatiels. Here are the top three reasons why it may seem impossible to teach these small birds to wave:

1) Their feet are really small

2) They often hop onto hand rather than step up

3) They aren’t as agile with their feet as larger parrots

I’m not even going to get into people thinking the birds are too dumb to learn tricks or that they are too wild to learn. That is complete rubbish and it’s the owners fault if they actually believe that. While the wave is considered a very elementary entry level trick for larger parrots, it is actually a fairly advanced trick for the smaller birds as you will see here. I would recommend at least teaching a few easy tricks beforehand like target, turn around, and go through tube before attempting to teach the wave. I’m not going to explain teaching the wave trick but rather will focus on how to apply typical techniques for training the trick and modifying them to work for a smaller bird.

Now I will address the issues with training small parrots to wave. Their feet really are small and much harder to get to than even medium sized parrots let alone big ones. While you can hold a macaw’s foot in your entire hand, you have to use just your smallest finger to handle a budgie’s foot. Initially when I began training the trick, I really wanted to use precision about lifting one foot rather than hopping or stepping up, so I used a pen for the bird to place its foot on. Later on I regressed to using my small finger. The issue with hopping can often be solved by using better precision about the foot lifting motion by directing it with a thinner finger or stick.

Finally, the last issue is that they are not so agile with their feet. I know for certain that budgies and cockatiels are ground feeders so they don’t have a need to eat out of their feet as the perching parrots do. Therefore they do not have as developed leg muscles and are not used to picking them up so high. This is probably the biggest problem with training them to wave because they just aren’t strong enough to pick their foot up high enough to make the trick even if they comprehend the cue. For this reason it took a whole month to train the wave trick to satisfaction to Duke.

He got the basics of the trick down within a few days that it had something to do with moving one foot around. The problem was that he just wouldn’t lift it very high. This is where patience and persistent training for over a month came in. We trained him twice daily with a big emphasis on wave trick to exercise his leg so he could lift it higher. It took a while before we started seeing results but it really worked. Training was more like physical therapy than training. He knew what to do but just wasn’t physically fit enough to do it. So the foot lifting exercises he received paid off and he learned to wave. His wave is still very quick and you will miss it if you blink. But hey, budgies do everything faster, it’s how they live.

So if you own a small bird, now you know that it can be taught to wave. You just have to have the patience and persistence to practice with the bird enough that it can strengthen its leg to be able to lift so high. I don’t want to see any more videos on youtube of the so-called “shake hands” trick where the owner basically grabs the bird’s foot and lifts it up and down. I want to see more people take the time to work with their bird so it could do a full wave by itself!

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