Francie Mae
Member
- Feb 22, 2025
- 31
- 8
- Parrots
- Bare-eyed cockatoo
Hey everyone!
Wanted to post an update about Grim. This is another long one but I bolded important stuff.
Flying
Heās flying now! His wings were clipped when we got him, and Iām not sure how much experience he had with flying before that, but now heāll fly to a room if he hears someone. The flying came about after we moved his cage from one side of the room to the other to get him comfortable with ānew things.ā Iām hoping to continue to find little things like that to do to get him comfortable with change. The only āissueā (but an expected behavior) is he will fly onto us whenever we pass by and he wonāt step off when we need him to. His cage has an exterior perch, so most of the day he does have the choice to leave/fly if he wants (heās in the living room now, so someone is always nearby) because we donāt want to keep him locked up all day. I donāt mind having him on my shoulder in theory, but in practice itās challenging, because heās gotten quite nippy, and the little guy will not step down back onto his perch when asked.
Biting
Weāve been seeing him bite more often, but it doesnāt seem to be out of aggression. Regardless, as one would expect, it hurts. My opinion on him hasnāt changed though because I knew going into it we would get bitten a lot. We gently but firmly tell him no, which sort of makes him stop? Sometimes he will get a reaction out of us, though, when he gets us by surprise; he bites the mole on my neck which inadvertently makes me yelp. He likes to preen me so I think he thinks itās a bug. I also have stud earrings that I canāt take out because the piercing is relatively new, and he tries to rip them out. He hasnāt drawn blood anywhere from biting but he has left some bruises. He seems to be much gentler with me than my parents, but itās still risky territory. Most injuries heal and most pain is temporary but if anyone has any tips on how to continue to discourage this behavior let me know! I donāt hold it against him because he is a parrot, and thatās part of the package, but if we can lessen it that would be great.
Preening
But that does bring me to something cute he doesāthe aforementioned preening! He runs his beak through my hair. He doesnāt pull. He tries his best to pull out my elastic hair ties, though! (Side note: is it okay if he chews on those? He doesnāt *eat* them, he just likes to chew, but Iām still concerned). He seems to preen me the most, but I think itās because I have the longest hair out of all of us.
Talking
And, other fun news, heās a big talker! His vocabulary is more than I expected for a bird of his age; I was under the impression that birds donāt really talk a whole lot until theyāre older. I could be wrong on that front, but itās still nice to hear him vocalize. So far, he says āhiiiiii,ā āstep up,ā āMWAH,ā and āohhhh!ā He also beak clicks if I make kissy sounds at him which is cute.
Relationships
Interaction wise, his favorite person started off as my mom, but now he seems to favor me and my dad. Luckily, though, he gets along with all household members. As for our Labrador, heās getting more and more comfortable. He hasnāt acknowledged the cats. They also donāt acknowledge him lol. Heās still shy around strangers, but we want to make sure he keeps getting introduced to people so heās used to it.
Noise level
Also as expected, this little man can scream. When one person leaves the room, even if thereās someone else still there, he gets upset and screams. Itās hard to ignore him until he stops because he *will* scream for long durations, and since heās in a room people pass through, he inadvertently gets what he wants eventually because we go through the room, even if not immediate. We could wait him out (even though that would take a very long time) but our house is one big circle so we canāt totally ignore him until heās calm. We also were trying to respond to him if he interrupted his screaming fit by deciding to talk to us instead, but thatās hard to time because itās scream ā> āstep up!ā ā> scream.
Training
Ah, the tale of Grim and his toy rope. We were fools to think his lonely scream was loud, because his shriek of otherworldly fear surpasses all known decibels. When my dad held a bird toy rope he got for Grim in front of him his resulting screech was bloodcurdling. I think the poor guy thought it was a snake. So we put the rope out of sight, but over time would touch it and bend it in front of him and let him look at it. But a week or two went by and he was still very adamant that the rope was a product of fatal evil, and while I really want to avoid pushing his boundaries and making him think that heās not safe with/respected by me, I do want to help him adjust to new things, so I tried a new method. I held the rope up and he screamed, but I talked him down and pet him a bit and then tried again. After a minute or two I coaxed him into touching the rope. He pulled away like heād been burned but I gave him a sunflower seed. Then I held up some other stuff that heās not scared of and told him to ātouch,ā and repeated the reward of the sunflower seed (I donāt want to spoil him with treats so if anyone has a better alternative for training/encouragement let me know!). The next time I held up the rope, he squawked but didnāt scream, and then touched it again. Eventually he stopped squawking/screaming and started chewing on it like he does with his other toys. He screamed later when he saw the rope at a different angle but Iām really proud of him for the progress that he made.
Diet
As for diet, heās eating more fruit than last I posted, and while we donāt think itās necessarily enough, itās a definite improvementābut a big portion of his meals end up on the bottom of his cage. Heāll pick something up, take a bite, then drop it, and do that again and again until his bowl is empty. If he doesnāt like something in his bowl heāll straight up toss it, but with his usual fruits/vegetable/seed/etc, it seems more that his eating style is just very inefficient rather than him having a dislike for it. My dad usually refills it if too much of it ends up on the floor, because he doesnāt want him to accidentally starve himself. He has access to fresh fruits/vegetables, both chopped and in normal pieces, but he eats āHarrisonās kibbleā for birds the most.
Vet
That brings me to talk about the vet! Weāve been trying to get an appointment with the nearest avian/exotic vet. I believe we do have an appointment booked. We want to make sure heās a healthy weight, and also confirm his age and that heās a boy. Of course I would still want him if āheā ended up being a girl, or older/younger than we were told, but we would like to know for sure (If anyone has any insight on his age based on the pics I posted on this thread, let me knowābut I know age is very hard to determine on appearance alone at this age). We also need his nails trimmed, because heās been cutting us up when he lands. I actually donāt mind a few scratches at all compared to biting because Iāve fostered a lot of kittens and they left me worse for wear than Grim does, but I also do think heās gentler with me. It could be because my dad has āolder skin,ā but his arm is super scabbed/clawed up from Grim landing on him.
Behavior by age
While weāve done a lot of research, my dad was wondering what peopleās experiences with their cockatoos have been as they age. The only significant change in behavior Iāve read to expect is when they sexually mature at 5/6yrs they start screaming/biting a lot more, but my dad wanted me to ask if adolescent cockatoos bite more or less than cockatoos that are over a year old (Grim is about 8 months). I was under the impression that young cockatoos scream less than cockatoos that are a bit older (the stage before āpubertyā but after his first year of life), but I donāt know about biting. If heās going to start biting/screaming more as he gets older than weāll handle that, but in your guysā experience, what did you notice?
Harness training
Does anyone have any advice for how to get started or good resources to get him accustomed to wearing one? Weād like to start that soon
Bird poop
If youāve managed to get your bird to go in one spot, how did you do it? I know Iāve talked about this before but I wanted to check in again. Parrot poop is no biggie compared to the chicken poop and cat vomit iām used to, especially since it comes right off my clothes, but..with how often he likes to preen my hair, which goes down to the middle of my back and is therefore in the poop-zoneā¦if he can be encouraged to go on his perch, that would be cool. Also, though, I can just tie my hair up. Assuming the little devil doesnāt take the hair tie out.
Conclusion
Overall, yāall, I love this bird. If it was possible to discourage him from biting me and trying to extract my earrings that would be rad, since I do like my earlobes intact, but as I said, I donāt hold it against him. Heās my little guy. Adulthood seems less scary knowing that Iāll have him as a constant. I look forward to letting him out in the morning and I miss him when we put him away at night. If we can mitigate the biting Iād let him perch on my shoulder or arm as long as he wanted since I enjoy his company. As is, though, I have to kind of be on my guard. But iām sure one way or another itāll work out, especially since hearing your guysā experience has been such a help
If you guys have any thoughts or advice or questions let me know, and thank you so much for reading.
Pictures:
(Because of the length of the post, iām making a separate one to put pictures!)

Flying
Heās flying now! His wings were clipped when we got him, and Iām not sure how much experience he had with flying before that, but now heāll fly to a room if he hears someone. The flying came about after we moved his cage from one side of the room to the other to get him comfortable with ānew things.ā Iām hoping to continue to find little things like that to do to get him comfortable with change. The only āissueā (but an expected behavior) is he will fly onto us whenever we pass by and he wonāt step off when we need him to. His cage has an exterior perch, so most of the day he does have the choice to leave/fly if he wants (heās in the living room now, so someone is always nearby) because we donāt want to keep him locked up all day. I donāt mind having him on my shoulder in theory, but in practice itās challenging, because heās gotten quite nippy, and the little guy will not step down back onto his perch when asked.
Biting
Weāve been seeing him bite more often, but it doesnāt seem to be out of aggression. Regardless, as one would expect, it hurts. My opinion on him hasnāt changed though because I knew going into it we would get bitten a lot. We gently but firmly tell him no, which sort of makes him stop? Sometimes he will get a reaction out of us, though, when he gets us by surprise; he bites the mole on my neck which inadvertently makes me yelp. He likes to preen me so I think he thinks itās a bug. I also have stud earrings that I canāt take out because the piercing is relatively new, and he tries to rip them out. He hasnāt drawn blood anywhere from biting but he has left some bruises. He seems to be much gentler with me than my parents, but itās still risky territory. Most injuries heal and most pain is temporary but if anyone has any tips on how to continue to discourage this behavior let me know! I donāt hold it against him because he is a parrot, and thatās part of the package, but if we can lessen it that would be great.
Preening
But that does bring me to something cute he doesāthe aforementioned preening! He runs his beak through my hair. He doesnāt pull. He tries his best to pull out my elastic hair ties, though! (Side note: is it okay if he chews on those? He doesnāt *eat* them, he just likes to chew, but Iām still concerned). He seems to preen me the most, but I think itās because I have the longest hair out of all of us.
Talking
And, other fun news, heās a big talker! His vocabulary is more than I expected for a bird of his age; I was under the impression that birds donāt really talk a whole lot until theyāre older. I could be wrong on that front, but itās still nice to hear him vocalize. So far, he says āhiiiiii,ā āstep up,ā āMWAH,ā and āohhhh!ā He also beak clicks if I make kissy sounds at him which is cute.
Relationships
Interaction wise, his favorite person started off as my mom, but now he seems to favor me and my dad. Luckily, though, he gets along with all household members. As for our Labrador, heās getting more and more comfortable. He hasnāt acknowledged the cats. They also donāt acknowledge him lol. Heās still shy around strangers, but we want to make sure he keeps getting introduced to people so heās used to it.
Noise level
Also as expected, this little man can scream. When one person leaves the room, even if thereās someone else still there, he gets upset and screams. Itās hard to ignore him until he stops because he *will* scream for long durations, and since heās in a room people pass through, he inadvertently gets what he wants eventually because we go through the room, even if not immediate. We could wait him out (even though that would take a very long time) but our house is one big circle so we canāt totally ignore him until heās calm. We also were trying to respond to him if he interrupted his screaming fit by deciding to talk to us instead, but thatās hard to time because itās scream ā> āstep up!ā ā> scream.
Training
Ah, the tale of Grim and his toy rope. We were fools to think his lonely scream was loud, because his shriek of otherworldly fear surpasses all known decibels. When my dad held a bird toy rope he got for Grim in front of him his resulting screech was bloodcurdling. I think the poor guy thought it was a snake. So we put the rope out of sight, but over time would touch it and bend it in front of him and let him look at it. But a week or two went by and he was still very adamant that the rope was a product of fatal evil, and while I really want to avoid pushing his boundaries and making him think that heās not safe with/respected by me, I do want to help him adjust to new things, so I tried a new method. I held the rope up and he screamed, but I talked him down and pet him a bit and then tried again. After a minute or two I coaxed him into touching the rope. He pulled away like heād been burned but I gave him a sunflower seed. Then I held up some other stuff that heās not scared of and told him to ātouch,ā and repeated the reward of the sunflower seed (I donāt want to spoil him with treats so if anyone has a better alternative for training/encouragement let me know!). The next time I held up the rope, he squawked but didnāt scream, and then touched it again. Eventually he stopped squawking/screaming and started chewing on it like he does with his other toys. He screamed later when he saw the rope at a different angle but Iām really proud of him for the progress that he made.
Diet
As for diet, heās eating more fruit than last I posted, and while we donāt think itās necessarily enough, itās a definite improvementābut a big portion of his meals end up on the bottom of his cage. Heāll pick something up, take a bite, then drop it, and do that again and again until his bowl is empty. If he doesnāt like something in his bowl heāll straight up toss it, but with his usual fruits/vegetable/seed/etc, it seems more that his eating style is just very inefficient rather than him having a dislike for it. My dad usually refills it if too much of it ends up on the floor, because he doesnāt want him to accidentally starve himself. He has access to fresh fruits/vegetables, both chopped and in normal pieces, but he eats āHarrisonās kibbleā for birds the most.
Vet
That brings me to talk about the vet! Weāve been trying to get an appointment with the nearest avian/exotic vet. I believe we do have an appointment booked. We want to make sure heās a healthy weight, and also confirm his age and that heās a boy. Of course I would still want him if āheā ended up being a girl, or older/younger than we were told, but we would like to know for sure (If anyone has any insight on his age based on the pics I posted on this thread, let me knowābut I know age is very hard to determine on appearance alone at this age). We also need his nails trimmed, because heās been cutting us up when he lands. I actually donāt mind a few scratches at all compared to biting because Iāve fostered a lot of kittens and they left me worse for wear than Grim does, but I also do think heās gentler with me. It could be because my dad has āolder skin,ā but his arm is super scabbed/clawed up from Grim landing on him.
Behavior by age
While weāve done a lot of research, my dad was wondering what peopleās experiences with their cockatoos have been as they age. The only significant change in behavior Iāve read to expect is when they sexually mature at 5/6yrs they start screaming/biting a lot more, but my dad wanted me to ask if adolescent cockatoos bite more or less than cockatoos that are over a year old (Grim is about 8 months). I was under the impression that young cockatoos scream less than cockatoos that are a bit older (the stage before āpubertyā but after his first year of life), but I donāt know about biting. If heās going to start biting/screaming more as he gets older than weāll handle that, but in your guysā experience, what did you notice?
Harness training
Does anyone have any advice for how to get started or good resources to get him accustomed to wearing one? Weād like to start that soon

Bird poop
If youāve managed to get your bird to go in one spot, how did you do it? I know Iāve talked about this before but I wanted to check in again. Parrot poop is no biggie compared to the chicken poop and cat vomit iām used to, especially since it comes right off my clothes, but..with how often he likes to preen my hair, which goes down to the middle of my back and is therefore in the poop-zoneā¦if he can be encouraged to go on his perch, that would be cool. Also, though, I can just tie my hair up. Assuming the little devil doesnāt take the hair tie out.
Conclusion
Overall, yāall, I love this bird. If it was possible to discourage him from biting me and trying to extract my earrings that would be rad, since I do like my earlobes intact, but as I said, I donāt hold it against him. Heās my little guy. Adulthood seems less scary knowing that Iāll have him as a constant. I look forward to letting him out in the morning and I miss him when we put him away at night. If we can mitigate the biting Iād let him perch on my shoulder or arm as long as he wanted since I enjoy his company. As is, though, I have to kind of be on my guard. But iām sure one way or another itāll work out, especially since hearing your guysā experience has been such a help

Pictures:
(Because of the length of the post, iām making a separate one to put pictures!)