Spacey'sMom
Member
- Aug 24, 2022
- 79
- 39
- Parrots
- 2 Budgies!
It's been a while since my last post so I'll give a recap then explain my reasoning.
Our Cockatiel Sirius (hand raised 2.5 year old) hit puberty like a ton of bricks. He has been trying to court our cats and dogs for over a year now.
We've had him on 12-16 hours of sleep, changed his diet, moved his cage, attempted removing any possible triggers, and even gave him a mirror in his cage out of desperation to get his focus on something else. We have curtains up in every doorway downstairs to still allow him time out of the cage but he continually finds a way around it. I'm just not sure what else we can do. We've even taken to shutting our cats and dogs up in our room(which is definitely not fair to them either) trying to break his obsession.
All of this while I was pregnant and with a newborn (5 months old now).
Yesterday was a breaking point. We rounded up the cats and dogs and put them in our room to make the switch(2 room house one is our master and the other is the baby's room) and as soon as my husband opened his cage he latched on to his hand and broke the skin.
We got him out of the room thinking he'd calm down like normal but he continued attacking my husband downstairs for about an hour. I'm not sure if it was the sound of the dogs upstairs or my 5 months old infant that was setting him off but he was holding her once when he flew at his face.
Once she starts walking there is very little we can do if he's claiming her. This is not/and has not been sustainable. We love our birds but this is leading us towards rehoming. We love our animals and this is breaking our hearts but we're at a loss. We discussed with the Vet and are down to 4 options left.
1) Clip his wings and try heavy behavioral modification training
2) Try the hormone blocking implant
3) Give him a friend/mate in the hopes that he settles down with more direct interaction.(This comes with the risk of two hormonal birds and not really a viable option imo)
4) Rehoming
I would gladly set up a bird only space but we're crammed as it is. The house is 2 beds and trying to separate part of the downstairs has only led him to climbing through/over/walking under the curtains at every opportunity.
The time we spend with him is becoming lower and lower quality and my husband basically flinches and/or braces anytime he comes near him.
He's still out sweet boy when his triggers are removed but the triggers either can't be removed or new ones pop up unexpectedly. Caging him for longer and longer only will make this worse.
The vet has told us that the implant can only be given once and is questionable efficacy. Works for some and not for others or only temporarily in some cases.
TLDR: Our Cockatiel hit puberty with a vengeance (the aggressive kind) and our last options are Clipping his wings so we can try training some of it out of him, getting the hormone blocking implant that may or may not work, or rehome him. We are going to clip his wings and I feel awful about it. Comments, stories, experiences, and advice appreciated.
Our Cockatiel Sirius (hand raised 2.5 year old) hit puberty like a ton of bricks. He has been trying to court our cats and dogs for over a year now.
We've had him on 12-16 hours of sleep, changed his diet, moved his cage, attempted removing any possible triggers, and even gave him a mirror in his cage out of desperation to get his focus on something else. We have curtains up in every doorway downstairs to still allow him time out of the cage but he continually finds a way around it. I'm just not sure what else we can do. We've even taken to shutting our cats and dogs up in our room(which is definitely not fair to them either) trying to break his obsession.
All of this while I was pregnant and with a newborn (5 months old now).
Yesterday was a breaking point. We rounded up the cats and dogs and put them in our room to make the switch(2 room house one is our master and the other is the baby's room) and as soon as my husband opened his cage he latched on to his hand and broke the skin.
We got him out of the room thinking he'd calm down like normal but he continued attacking my husband downstairs for about an hour. I'm not sure if it was the sound of the dogs upstairs or my 5 months old infant that was setting him off but he was holding her once when he flew at his face.
Once she starts walking there is very little we can do if he's claiming her. This is not/and has not been sustainable. We love our birds but this is leading us towards rehoming. We love our animals and this is breaking our hearts but we're at a loss. We discussed with the Vet and are down to 4 options left.
1) Clip his wings and try heavy behavioral modification training
2) Try the hormone blocking implant
3) Give him a friend/mate in the hopes that he settles down with more direct interaction.(This comes with the risk of two hormonal birds and not really a viable option imo)
4) Rehoming
I would gladly set up a bird only space but we're crammed as it is. The house is 2 beds and trying to separate part of the downstairs has only led him to climbing through/over/walking under the curtains at every opportunity.
The time we spend with him is becoming lower and lower quality and my husband basically flinches and/or braces anytime he comes near him.
He's still out sweet boy when his triggers are removed but the triggers either can't be removed or new ones pop up unexpectedly. Caging him for longer and longer only will make this worse.
The vet has told us that the implant can only be given once and is questionable efficacy. Works for some and not for others or only temporarily in some cases.
TLDR: Our Cockatiel hit puberty with a vengeance (the aggressive kind) and our last options are Clipping his wings so we can try training some of it out of him, getting the hormone blocking implant that may or may not work, or rehome him. We are going to clip his wings and I feel awful about it. Comments, stories, experiences, and advice appreciated.