ShreddedOakAviary
New member
- Jul 13, 2011
- 591
- 5
- Parrots
- M2's, U2's, G2's, RB2's, VOS, RLA's, BFA's, DYHA's, Dusky Pionus, Blue and Green Quakers, Meyers Parrots, VOS, GW Macaw's, Harlequin Macaws, Tiels, YNA, TAG's, CAG's, Blue Crown Conures, Red sided Ecl
Training a parrot is not terribly difficult, but teaching an owner to read and understand their bird is impossible. What I'm learning is that some people simply lack the ability to acurately understand their pets behavoir.
I retrained a Severe Macaw for some people, and they are having new behavoir problems with her now. After I went over and assessed the situation I realized that they had over done it, at certain points they failed to understand that she simply didn't want to be bothered, and because I trained her to step up, she would step up if they forced her, but she continued to get more and more hostile. Birds are not domestic (as we all know) and at certain points we have to respect their wishes.
The horse I retrained has the same problem (owners who flat out lack the ability to understand her). Sometimes she throws a fit and needs a firm forceful hand, sometimes she's insecure and needs to be reassured and made to trust and do what is asked.... Instead her owners let her get away with certain behavoirs and beat her when she was afraid.... what they made was a mess of a horses mind.
So, why are so many people incapable of understanding animals?
We see it all the time....
New puppy gets beaten when he/she pees on the floor
Horse gets beaten into submission because it's easier than actually teaching it.
Birds that learn to bite because their owners fail to know which battles to choose.
So, what do we do? How do we teach a whole society of people how to look at things from an animals perspective? Is it linked with people thinking of animals as a posession?:11:
I retrained a Severe Macaw for some people, and they are having new behavoir problems with her now. After I went over and assessed the situation I realized that they had over done it, at certain points they failed to understand that she simply didn't want to be bothered, and because I trained her to step up, she would step up if they forced her, but she continued to get more and more hostile. Birds are not domestic (as we all know) and at certain points we have to respect their wishes.
The horse I retrained has the same problem (owners who flat out lack the ability to understand her). Sometimes she throws a fit and needs a firm forceful hand, sometimes she's insecure and needs to be reassured and made to trust and do what is asked.... Instead her owners let her get away with certain behavoirs and beat her when she was afraid.... what they made was a mess of a horses mind.
So, why are so many people incapable of understanding animals?
We see it all the time....
New puppy gets beaten when he/she pees on the floor
Horse gets beaten into submission because it's easier than actually teaching it.
Birds that learn to bite because their owners fail to know which battles to choose.
So, what do we do? How do we teach a whole society of people how to look at things from an animals perspective? Is it linked with people thinking of animals as a posession?:11: