Quaker Parrots
Quaker Parrot Training & How To Get Started
If you've ever
wondered if there was a way to train your
Quaker parrot to,
willingly step up onto your hand, stop his annoying screeching (that
seems to be so common with Quaker Parrots), and never bite you
again, then you should drop what you're doing and read every word of
this article.
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Here's the deal with
Quaker Parrots... They're a whole lot of energy in a little
body, and they like to express it in any way that they can.
So it's my job as a
parrot behavior specialist, to show you the right and the wrong
way for handling your Quaker Parrot.
You're going to want
to study the resources that I'm going to tell you about, from cover
to cover, and beginning to end, so that you'll know how to channel
your little feathered friends energy... because Quaker Parrots are
one of the easiest parrots to train!
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So Here's How To
Start Training Your Quaker Parrot!
First you'll want to
click on this link and sign up for my free
Quaker
Parrot Training Videos where you'll learn how I took one of
my clients parrots, that I'd never met, seen, or trained, and taught
him how to do his first trick in three 15 minute training sessions!
And how me training that parrot, transformed it's behavior!
The reason that you
want to train your Quaker Parrot how to do tricks is simple,
and I liken it to the story of Helen Keller; the woman who was born
blind, deaf, and mute, and had no idea how to communicate to her
family and friends, what was on her mind.
Your
Quaker Bird is
like Hellen Keller, in the sense that it has no idea how to
communicate with you it's needs wants and desires. But if you would
spend some time teaching your Quaker Parrot how to learn
behaviors ie. tricks, then teaching him other things, like to
not bite you, step up nicely, or to stop screaming, become a MUCH
easier part of your Quaker Parrots Training, and learning process.
All in all he'll be
much less frustrated with you, and when he gets frustrated in the
future with you, on a behavior that you haven't taught him to do
yet, he'll be more likely to willingly have you show him how to
appropriately do the behavior, versus just biting you out of
frustration |