Hi there, and thanks in advance for reading my post. This is my second post about Vim, who is doing great. She enjoys my company, and has learned all sorts of tricks. I can say, "Hello," and she says, "Hi Kara" (my wife's name). I can say, "The Andy Griffith show!", and she whistles the theme song. I say, "What's wrong with you?", and she responds, "I have no lips!"
Every day I train her for about a 30 minutes. One of the tricks we work on is step-up. We've been doing this trick for months, but the other day she bit the crud out of me after she stepped up nicely. I think she was kind of demanding a treat. A few days later, I was scratching her head at night, which she loves, and she bit me again! I think I touched a sore quill feather. And one more time a few days later, she got spooked on my shoulder or something and bit me on the nose. It doesn't seem like she's been angry with me on any of these occasions, more like an instinctual, in-the-moment bite.
This is my third parrot, and while I'm not expert in bird behavior, I do have some bird-brain understanding. Vim's never been forced to step up: I always ask her and respect her when she doesn't want to be held. She's never been disciplined or had any sort of demonstration of aggressive behavior. I generally just ignore behavior I don't like, and promote behavior I do with kind words, scratches, or a treat. That's worked well so far because she's very well behaved, sweet, quiet (compared to our resident conure), potty trained... But now this biting out of the blue! No eye pinning, no ruffled feathers, no hissing, just wham!
My response so far has been to remain calm and say, "Ow, I bite!" with a sad tone. When I tell her that, she looks like she understands (maybe that sounds strange). When she bit my nose, I calmly put her back in her cage and walked away. Does that seem like the right strategy?
She really is a great bird, but I'm used to conures. I can grab them by the body, flip them over, ruffle their feathers, and it's all play to them. Vim's very body shy, proud, and she spooks easily, and I'm constantly working on trust accordingly.
Thanks again, and I'll leave you with this picture.