Now that Mulawa is acclimatised to the lounge and dining room I'm starting to introduce her to other rooms of the house and asking her to step down onto many new surfaces. This is done daily and of course Delfin is helping too. :bunny7:
Mulawa displays the following behaviour, When asked to step down onto the table, she will put one foot down onto the table but will hold onto my finger with the other foot and rather tightly. I will just hold my hand there until she either gets the courage to step down completely or step back up to the hand. This usually takes around 3 to 4 attempts before she will step down and not hold onto my finger. When Mulawa first started to step up she would hold onto my finger extremely tight, but with more interactions, she was not griping onto my finger has tightly, in fact the last few days she is quite relaxed when sitting on my finger. The bonding and trust building sessions are paying off.
:jumping40
I'm wondering if any other Parrots behaved the same way when they were being introduced to new areas and surfaces and if its just young birds that display this behaviour or age doesn't matter. Is this behaviour more pronounced in certain species or is it a more individual trait ?.
The Alexandrine Parrot is reported not to be the most cuddly or dependant species of parrot, (this is not what I have found with Delfin and now Mulawa) but the behaviour displayed by Mulawa is one that says "I'm holding onto you because I'm unsure and a bit scared".
What are your thoughts on this?
Mulawa displays the following behaviour, When asked to step down onto the table, she will put one foot down onto the table but will hold onto my finger with the other foot and rather tightly. I will just hold my hand there until she either gets the courage to step down completely or step back up to the hand. This usually takes around 3 to 4 attempts before she will step down and not hold onto my finger. When Mulawa first started to step up she would hold onto my finger extremely tight, but with more interactions, she was not griping onto my finger has tightly, in fact the last few days she is quite relaxed when sitting on my finger. The bonding and trust building sessions are paying off.
:jumping40
I'm wondering if any other Parrots behaved the same way when they were being introduced to new areas and surfaces and if its just young birds that display this behaviour or age doesn't matter. Is this behaviour more pronounced in certain species or is it a more individual trait ?.
The Alexandrine Parrot is reported not to be the most cuddly or dependant species of parrot, (this is not what I have found with Delfin and now Mulawa) but the behaviour displayed by Mulawa is one that says "I'm holding onto you because I'm unsure and a bit scared".
What are your thoughts on this?