- Feb 28, 2013
- 305
- 1
- Parrots
- Green Cheek Conure Pee-Wee
Newb to this board, but have a couple decades of parrot ownership under my belt.
I've been following this thread with some interest, as it seems to confirm a conclusion I've come to over the years, which is that a lot of behavioral problems can be prevented from happening in the first place by always keeping in mind that parrots are basically wild animals with sharp bills and powerful jaw muscles. They have learned to live with people, but they retain their wild instincts and automatic reactions. I think the practice of cuddling with parrots invites biting because of the huge difference in size and mentality between between us and them, and because that sort of physical closeness is unnatural for most parrots. If you let your parrot crawl all over you for a significant amount of time and blur the boundaries between human and wild animal you should EXPECT to be bitten. I have never owned an Amazon, but having handled them I would never let one on my shoulder or beyond my hand, nor would I try to cuddle with it. I wouldn't let any large bird beyond my hand. One of the great things about parrots it observing them and enjoying their intelligence and beauty without having to constantly touch and fondle them. I think the parrots often prefer that as well.
I've been following this thread with some interest, as it seems to confirm a conclusion I've come to over the years, which is that a lot of behavioral problems can be prevented from happening in the first place by always keeping in mind that parrots are basically wild animals with sharp bills and powerful jaw muscles. They have learned to live with people, but they retain their wild instincts and automatic reactions. I think the practice of cuddling with parrots invites biting because of the huge difference in size and mentality between between us and them, and because that sort of physical closeness is unnatural for most parrots. If you let your parrot crawl all over you for a significant amount of time and blur the boundaries between human and wild animal you should EXPECT to be bitten. I have never owned an Amazon, but having handled them I would never let one on my shoulder or beyond my hand, nor would I try to cuddle with it. I wouldn't let any large bird beyond my hand. One of the great things about parrots it observing them and enjoying their intelligence and beauty without having to constantly touch and fondle them. I think the parrots often prefer that as well.