I have recently adopted a 4 year old Congo African Grey. He was very tame with the lady we bought him from and she got him out of his cage no problem. We have only had him for 2 days now, but it really seems we are having no progress with trying to have him step up. I open the cage door and he crawls out no problem he will take food out of my hand no problem. Every time I go to put my hand towards him to step up he seems to want to bite me. I do not actually jerk my hand away, but i do calmly pull it back to avoid bding bit. I use the command step up as his previous owner did as well. I also firmly, but not loud say no when he tries to bite. He does seem a little nervous when I start trying to make him step up as he starts a shivering act. I have always wanted one of these and will try next to anything to actually keep him around and train him. I know it will take lots of time and I am willing to give. If there is any hope at all for me plz someone tell me.
Thanks
"I have always wanted one of these and will try next to anything to actually keep him around and train him. I know it will take lots of time and I am willing to give."
I hope so since you bought him. Now, did the previous owner hand the bird to you and did you have any interaction with him BEFORE you bought him? He's probably just nervous. Re-homing is very traumatic to a bird, especially birds like african greys, which are very sensitive birds. You need to allow him to get to know you. This could take days, weeks and even months. So, slow is best with a lot of patience.
Try just sitting near his cage, talking to him, reading and even singing to him. Spend lots of time with him so that he gets used to you being there. Then find out which treat he loves the most and use it as a bribe to get him to step up on command. Be sure to give lots of praise each time that he does it. You may want to start with a stick before using your arm. He may be more comfortable with the stick method. This will serve two purposes, teach him to step up and also teaching him to use a stick, which all bird owners should do. It will come in handy someday.
Now, if you didn't handle the bird before you bought him and the owner didn't offer him to you to hold, there may be a reason for that. He may not have been well socialized meaning, he may be a one person bird and hasn't been handles by other people. The owner may have known this. If this is the case, you will have a long hard road ahead of you because you will not only have to get him used to you, but if you want him to socialize with others, you will have to work on that as well.
I'm hoping it's the first part and not the latter for your sake. Good luck and let us know how the progress is going.
mike