I am inexperienced and need help

Pampa

New member
May 24, 2018
116
2
Northern Ca
Parrots
Jazzy Pizazzy, Jenday Conure ~
Corbin, Nanday Conure (little Crow) ~
Lucky & Mojo, the Budgies ~
Pampa Blue Crown Conure lost 6/18/2019 ☹️
Hi, I have experience with budgies and cockatiels. I have had a 3 year old blue crown conure for just two days. I tried to follow the directions to leave her alone for a few days but she is desperate to be out of her cage. I let her out today and she spent most of the day on her stand. She played with toys and asked me what I was doing around 100 times. When I sat down in front of my computer she flew to me and started repeatedly giving me loud sweet kisses. Oh my. I was told to go slow. I am wondering how I should be with a bird that has more experience interacting with humans then I have with conures?

I want to train her to be in a sleeping cage in another room. When and how do you introduce that to a bird?

Thank you
Roxanne
 

gracebowen

Active member
Jan 14, 2015
1,439
3
San Antonio
Parrots
Cora lovebird
Sky parakeet
Go at your fids pace. I think it was good you let her out as long as she goes back when you want or need her to.

Will she step up for you? Can you touch her?
 
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Pampa

New member
May 24, 2018
116
2
Northern Ca
Parrots
Jazzy Pizazzy, Jenday Conure ~
Corbin, Nanday Conure (little Crow) ~
Lucky & Mojo, the Budgies ~
Pampa Blue Crown Conure lost 6/18/2019 ☹️
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Yes he steps up. He has mouthed me a little bit hard. I am told he/she could be testing me. Yes I am able to get back into the cage. My concern is I am not sure how to touch the conure. My cockatiels never wanted to be touch. I used my face to rub against her and touched her beak. Due to my I experience with such a tame and forward bird I am a little bit afraid if him/her. He/she nicely takes treats from me.
 

IndySE

Active member
May 5, 2016
419
36
Southern California
Parrots
Kermit, ♀ GCC (Green Demon)
I think hand-fed babies that are extremely people socialized don't need the 3 day period to "settle". They came from a life where they were attended to be humans almost every moment. It is probably harder for them to adjust if they suddenly have no people touching them. If she/he wants to be touched and taken out, then do it. If you're worried about overwhelming them, then just take them out for short but frequent bursts. I took Kermit out without moments of bringing her home, lol.

& as for the sleeping cage, just do it and they figure it out quick. The sooner you do it, the more cemented it will become as a routine. I put Kermit in her sleeping cage within her first night and she took to it well. She looks forward to going in each night (usually, unless she's in a stinky mood). She wakes me up each morning when she's ready to go back to her big cage.
 

EllenD

New member
Aug 20, 2016
3,979
65
State College, PA
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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"
Well said by Indy and by FlBoy...First of all, the advice you got is not correct, there is no set amount of time you are supposed to "leave the bird alone", that's just going to drive you and the bird crazy! Each bird is an individual, and each was raised differently and is used to a different level of interaction. Your Conure obviously comes from a family who paid a lot of attention to him, so he wants attention. No need to ignore him at all, as said, go at his pace.

It sounds like your Cockatiels/Budgies were parent-raised birds and not hand-raised, and were not hand-tamed at all. In that instance you have to spend a long time hand-taming them on a daily basis. In the case of your Conure, especially being a Blue Crown Conure, he most-likely came from a private breeder who pulled their babies from the nest-box at 2-3 weeks old and hand-raised/hand-fed them from that point onward. So he's very tame and thinks that humans are his "peeps". He wants to be with you, on you, etc.

Now don't think that you're not going to get nipped/bitten because he's a hand-tamed parrot, we all have been bitten for one reason or another by our very tame, loving, cuddly little family members. Whether due to hormones, mood-swings, you doing something that they don't like, or they are just being bratty, they will let you know when they don't like something. That being said, the more time you spend with your bird, the more you will become used to his warning signs/sounds and you'll learn when and when not to do things. It sounds to me like overall you have a very tame, friendly, loving little parrot, and I have to say I'm jealous, I have always loved the Blue Crowns, they are beautiful, goofy birds! Just take it at his pace and your pace, one day at a time, baby steps, and you'll be fine. No need to listen to any of the "advice" you've been given, as it is not good advice at all; there is no standard behavior that all birds will exhibit, nor can you approach every bird the same way. So forget everything you were told and just start from the beginning, and just figure it out as you go along, with YOUR BIRD, as he's going to have his own personality...

As far as cages go, he should have one very large cage, his "main cage", which is located in whatever room of your house is the room where the people spend most of their time when they're home, or the room where the "action" is. Usually this is the living room, family room, den, etc. Even if you're not directly interacting with your bird and you're simply watching TV, reading a book, playing a video game, etc., as long as he's in his cage in the same room and can see you, he'll be happy to entertain himself inside his cage with he toys and such. It's only when you put their main cage in a bedroom or spare room of the house, and then the bird can hear his people are home, but in another room where he can't see them, that you'll get a screaming bird.

As far as a "sleeping cage", it should be much, much smaller than his main cage, only large enough for him to comfortably open his wings fully and move around a bit, but no toys or anything inside it, just a perch, a swing (if he likes swings), and a water dish. The sleeping cage can be located in your bedroom, or whatever room you want him to sleep in.
 

GaleriaGila

Well-known member
Parrot of the Month 🏆
May 14, 2016
15,067
8,801
Cleveland area
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The Rickeybird, 38-year-old Patagonian Conure
Hello, and welcome. I like your style... you're very open-minded and energetic about reaching out. Please stick with us so that we can share your journey. There is so much to learn about diet, toys, socializing... and there is so much to read here. You'll see that we sometimes disagree, but all opinions will help you figure out what's right for your darling.
Yes, take your biggest clues from your bird, and feel free to depart from any advice that doesn't seem to ring true (including mine). :D
 
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Pampa

New member
May 24, 2018
116
2
Northern Ca
Parrots
Jazzy Pizazzy, Jenday Conure ~
Corbin, Nanday Conure (little Crow) ~
Lucky & Mojo, the Budgies ~
Pampa Blue Crown Conure lost 6/18/2019 ☹️
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Thank you EllenD. Your reply is very helpful and appreciated.
 

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