Yesturday I adopted adopted a unsocial female eckie. She was filthy and eating nothing but junk dyed seed blend. Today she got a shower. But her previous owner only used gloves to handle her. After several painful bites I used a glove to remove her from her cage to bathe. I understand it is going to take months to build her trust in me, but I don't want to use a glove. Any ideas?
Thanks
DeAna
Hi DeAna, eclectus hens are so misunderstood most of the time & that is usually the reason a lot end up being rehomed. This bird is biting because she knows if she bites she will usually be left alone, plus she is terrified. My advice would be to gain her trust first & shoving gloved hands & towels in front of her are only going to make her worse especially since you have only had her a day or so. She isn't a young bird so she would be set in her ways.
Personally i would let her settle in first before i even tried to handle her. She is scared of her new enviornment & anything you do now to upset her is only going to put any trust further behind. Whenever i bring a new adult bird home, it is placed in it's cage & fed. I don't try to do anything else with the bird until it's body language tells me different. Once the bird is comfortable with my presence i then start to work with it. Never force an eclectus to do something it doesn't want to do. Once they learn to trust you they usually will come to you.
I have 3 adult eclectus hens, I hand reared 2 of them & i don't handle them anymore, I have had some very nasty chunks taken out of me so i can tell you from experience that i respect my girls. I love them & talk to them & they talk back but we have an understanding that if i don't try to touch them they won't bite me. I must also say they are breeders.
That said you can over time build up that trust i was talking about but that will take a long time, it could take a year or two. A friend of mine had a wonderful relationship with his breeding hen but before she fully trusted him she would do some damage to him even sending him to the ER for stitches.
Just don't rush her, take things slow & don't be to much in a hurry. Let her come to you when she is ready. And above all respect her.