How to get my African Grey's trust

Mike24

New member
May 26, 2018
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Hi, so I bought a 5 year old African grey a few weeks ago and he was so nice, friendly and playful. A few days ago I took him to the vet to get his beak trimmed because it was long and his nails cut. Ever since we got back from the vet he hates me now. Every time i go near him he tries to bite me and he no longer lets me carry him anymore. So how can i get him to like me and trust me again. I want to hold him and spends time with him. Any ways i can get him to like me again? Thanks!
 

Scott

Supporting Member
Aug 21, 2010
32,673
9,789
San Diego, California USA, Earth, Milky Way Galaxy
Parrots
Goffins: Gabby, Abby, Squeaky, Peanut, Popcorn / Citron: Alice / Eclectus: Angel /Timneh Grey: ET / Blue Fronted Amazon: Gonzo /

RIP Gandalf and Big Bird, you are missed.
Welcome to the forums, and congratulations for your Grey! They are extraordinarily intelligent and at times temperamental parrots. The link that was kindly posted by Caitnah is an excellent resource.

He is still fairly new to you, and may have perceived the vet visit (however well intended!!) as a breach of trust. Time, love, and consistent techniques with reward should build a deeper trust and bond.

As he becomes more comfortable, you might also consider Clicker Training: http://www.parrotforums.com/training/60435-clicker-target-training.html
 

EllenD

New member
Aug 20, 2016
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State College, PA
Parrots
Senegal Parrot named "Kane"; Yellow-Sided Green Cheek Conure named "Bowie"; Blue Quaker Parrot named "Lita Ford"; Cockatiel named "Duff"; 8 American/English Budgie Hybrids; Ringneck Dove named "Dylan"
Awe, that's a terrible thing to have happen, but Greys are so intelligent, they have the intelligence of a 4-5 year-old human toddler. They are also creatures of habit. So not only was he just taken from his home of the first 5 years of his life only a few weeks ago, and taken away from his "people" from the first 5 years of his life, and then put into a completely new home with a completely new person, then only a couple of weeks into this new home with the new person this very traumatic thing happened to him (his perception of what the Vet did, not that it was really a horrible thing that was done to him, just so you understand what I'm saying)...That's the way that he's thinking about this situation right now.

The other thing is that you were just getting into the "honeymoon period", the first few weeks to months of owning a new parrot, where everything is new and great and wonderful, and also the time when yes, you are first earning your bird's trust. And even though I always recommend that people take their parrots for a Wellness Exam when they first bring them home, I'm starting to wonder if it's not a good idea, especially when it's an adult bird that has just been moved from one home and person to another, to wait a month or two before taking them to the Avian Vet...It might not make any difference at all, I don't know, just an observation...Especially with something like a beak-trim...

Just an FYI, I've know people who had a Grey, a Macaw, a Cockatoo, etc. for years, since they were just weaned, they were their bird's only owner, and who had taken them to the same Avian Vet many, many times over the years, for injections/blood draws, exams, cultures, x-rays where they were gas-sedated, etc., and they had no issues at all at any time...BUT, when they took their birds to the same Avian Vet for a beak-trim where the Vet used a Dremel-like tool to trim the beak, this caused HUGE ISSUES with their bird instantly behaving just like your bird is behaving. I know that it's a necessary thing, beak-trims, as when they get too long they have trouble eating, along with many other problems...but I just absolutely refuse to have my CAV do it. I don't have a bird as large as a Grey, but I have a Senegal who's beak does have a tendency to grow a bit on the long side, and I just absolutely refuse to let my CAV do it with the Dremel tool...My Senegal has all kinds of mineral blocks, cement perches, sandpaper perches, and other such toys that are meant to keep both his nails and his beak trimmed...I do all of my bird's toenails myself, and I also will file their beaks with an emery-board when they get pointy...But after hearing all of the horror stories about the beak trimming with the Dremel tool it's just not going to happen...I actually read an awful post, I believe it was on this forum, where a perfectly healthy Eclectus was taken by his owner to their regular CAV for a beak trim with the Dremel tool, and the Eclectus started breathing in a very labored way during the trim and for a time afterwards, and they put the bird in an O2 chamber for 20 minutes, and he seemed fine, so the owner put him in the car and they drove home...But as they approached home the bird started vomiting in the car and breathing rapidly and in a labored way again, so he pulled the car over and called the vet back and was told to bring him right back, so he drove as quickly as he could with his only 3 or 4 year old bird in his lap, and the bird died as they neared the vet office...Apparently the bird inhaled a bunch of the dust/particles from the beak trimming...this sounded to me like a CAV that didn't know how to properly do a beak trim with one of those electric trimmers, but I don't know much about them to be honest...

Anyway, to get back-on-track with your current issue, as already stated the only thing that is going to help you earn your Grey's trust again is time. You basically need to approach this like you just brought him home today, like he has just left his home of 5 years and his person, and has just been brought into his new home with his new person. The only difference this time is going to be that you are going to have to actually earn his trust first this time before he is friendly with you or allows you to touch him or hold him....So you need to start completely over with the basics.

So as of now he won't even step-up for you I assume? If not, that's where you need to start, getting him to simply step-up for you. That's always step #1, because once a bird is willing to step-up for you, then you are on your way to earning their complete trust. Once he is willing to again step-up for you, ONLY THEN can you start to work on being able to pet him, scratch him, or hold him/hug him again. It will happen, don't lose faith or get too frustrated with him, as it's going to take time...This is always a marathon and never a sprint.

He's had what he perceived as a very traumatic, scary, possibly painful ordeal happen to him, and he is blaming you for it because you took him there (if the vet wasn't the best at what he was doing, I hope it was a Certified Avian Vet that did the trimming and not an "Exotics" Vet, as their beaks have lots and lots of nerve-endings and a blood supply, so if they aren't very experienced at using an electric Dremel tool to do beak-trimmings, they can really cause them a lot of pain)...So you need to just spend as much time as you can spend with him every single day, talk to him as much as you possibly can in the softest, most loving voice that you can, and go very, very slowly. Don't just try to pick him up or start petting him, but rather go very slowly, talk to him, and use his favorite treats to work on getting him to simply step-up for you. And once that starts happening then you go from there...

I forgot to ask you, out of curiosity, were you in the room with him when the beak and nail trimming happened? Could he see you/hear you while it was going-on? If so, that might be the reason that he blamed you for the entire ordeal, that's a tough call to make, while it's so difficult to let them in with the vet alone while they are going through things like that, sometimes I think it's better to let the Vet be the bad guy...
 
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Mike24

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May 26, 2018
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Thanks for the great information. I was not in the room while he was getting his beak trimmed, but I took him there and maybe that's why he doesn't like me anymore because he perceived me with his pain.
 

Scott

Supporting Member
Aug 21, 2010
32,673
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San Diego, California USA, Earth, Milky Way Galaxy
Parrots
Goffins: Gabby, Abby, Squeaky, Peanut, Popcorn / Citron: Alice / Eclectus: Angel /Timneh Grey: ET / Blue Fronted Amazon: Gonzo /

RIP Gandalf and Big Bird, you are missed.
Thanks for the great information. I was not in the room while he was getting his beak trimmed, but I took him there and maybe that's why he doesn't like me anymore because he perceived me with his pain.

Many vets, particularly if confident, will perform basic functions in the same room. Mine brings the dremel, ultrasound, etc with him so I am next to the birds. Some parronts prefer to not be nearby for various reasons!
 

EllenD

New member
Aug 20, 2016
3,979
65
State College, PA
Parrots
Senegal Parrot named "Kane"; Yellow-Sided Green Cheek Conure named "Bowie"; Blue Quaker Parrot named "Lita Ford"; Cockatiel named "Duff"; 8 American/English Budgie Hybrids; Ringneck Dove named "Dylan"
Thanks for the great information. I was not in the room while he was getting his beak trimmed, but I took him there and maybe that's why he doesn't like me anymore because he perceived me with his pain.

Many vets, particularly if confident, will perform basic functions in the same room. Mine brings the dremel, ultrasound, etc with him so I am next to the birds. Some parronts prefer to not be nearby for various reasons!

Yeah, it's a judgment call...My first instinct is to always want to be there with them, and I usually am for everything, like blood draws, injections, crop flushes, etc. The short-term gas-sedation for x-rays is always the hardest part for me and for them, when they start screaming as soon as the mask is put over their beaks my heart just melts and I have to force myself not to start crying. And then when they start coming out of it and are wobbling all over the place, trying to get away from the vet or the vet-tech, who is usually saying "Awe, you don't like me anymore, do you, you want your mamma? There's your mamma, go over there!", while poor Kane is doing everything he can to get his drunk-butt over to me and away from the "bad people"...

I am always afraid in the back of my head that if I'm there with them while the vet is doing something scary or painful to them that they are going to be angry with me and suddenly hate me...It's not ever happened, in fact it's always been just the opposite, they always seem to love me even more and are usually ten-times as cuddly as they normally are for the rest of that day....But I think that's because nothing like what your Grey just went through ever happened to my birds BEFORE we were well-bonded and had been together for months and months...That may be exactly why this happened with your Grey, he had only been with you for a couple of weeks when he got the beak trim, and it was just too soon for him to go through that...That's what I meant earlier by the "honeymoon period"; even though he was being loving and cuddly with you for the first couple of weeks that you had him, you really hadn't yet earned his trust. You hadn't done anything to him for him to not trust you yet, and you were certainly heading in that direction, but the beak trim happened too soon...It may have been a totally different outcome had he been with you for 6 months at the time of the beak trim, who knows...Something for others to learn from at least, something for people to think about and make their own decisions based on your experience, so in that respect we found a silver-lining...

I'm sure that if he was that loving and cuddly with you right off the bat when you first brought him home that he'll come-around and you'll earn his trust again, it's just going to take some time now. Again, you're starting all over, from square 1, so just work on being near him, talking to him softly and gently, telling him you love him, making sure that he's at least in the same room as you are whenever you're at home, even if you're not directly interacting with him, and spend as much time as possible each day working on just getting him to step-up for you again. Plenty of his favorite treats to reward him, plenty of soft and gentle praise from you for him, and it will happen...
 

mh434

New member
Oct 28, 2014
473
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BC, Canada
Parrots
Yellow-naped Amazon "Sammy"
Love birds (4)
Green-cheeked Conure "Skittles" - now, sadly gone from my life
Blue-Crowned Conure "Tequila"
African Grey "Reno" - sadly, now gone from my life
I made the mistake of being in with my YNA when he got his nails trimmed. It's been years, and he's never forgiven me. There's NO chance of getting him into a travel cage now without going through months or years of hatred.

My advice? NEVER be in there with the vet. Instead, come in afterward and be the hero who "rescues" the bird from the "mean" vet.
 

Scott

Supporting Member
Aug 21, 2010
32,673
9,789
San Diego, California USA, Earth, Milky Way Galaxy
Parrots
Goffins: Gabby, Abby, Squeaky, Peanut, Popcorn / Citron: Alice / Eclectus: Angel /Timneh Grey: ET / Blue Fronted Amazon: Gonzo /

RIP Gandalf and Big Bird, you are missed.
In my experience it is a combination of the parront, bird, and vet. Haven't had "blowback" from any of mine following a visit. Each situation is unique, but I don't doubt there are toxic experiences that linger for years or longer!
 

Tami2

Well-known member
Aug 18, 2017
5,088
2,454
New Jersey
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Levi - 6 yr old CAG

DOH-4/2/2016
Hey Mike24, Congratulations and Welcome to the forums.
I haven’t had that experience, luckily Levi is very forgiving after Vet visits.

If you haven’t already, I suggest you read this informative thread.
http://www.parrotforums.com/congo-timneh-greys/59366-cag-101-a.html

Also, after his vet visits you can offer him his favorite treats and make a habit of it. So, instead of staying angry at you, he’ll start to look forward to the treats that follow. That’s what I would do.

Good Luck.
 

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