Jump to content
NEW ADDRESS FOR MEMBERS GREYFORUMS.ORG ×
NEW ADDRESS FOR MEMBERS GREYFORUMS.ORG

danmcq

Members
  • Posts

    23,989
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by danmcq

  1. danmcq

    Seeds..?

    Dayo eats spaghetti, however, the sauce is garlic and onion free. I will occasionally let dayo have something that does have a small quantity of cooked sauce with garlic in it, however it is not cumulative and passes out of their system in a day.
  2. Welcome Timbersmom. The others have given good advice. It takes a while for them to become accustomed to their new home and people. At 5 years old he is mature, set in his ways and as you have found, will give a nip if you try to push him. Did the vet weigh him? The reason I ask is why he stated he is under weight. Timneh's are the smallest of the grey family. It sounds like he is eating well based n your comments. It is no surprise he does not care much for pellets. Some will eat them, some will eat a few and some will not eat any. The most important thing is a good rounded diet as you are already starting to provide him. They can maintain a perfectly healthy life with out pellets. He is a fine looking Timneh!
  3. Dayo calls: Me - Daddy or Dan McQuilliams (he uses this if he REALLY wants me to come to where he is) Wife - Mommy or Kim McQuilliams (he uses this if he REALLY wants her to come to where he is Dogs - He calls then by name Bentley or Chloe Respectively Friends dogs that visit - By their names, Roxie and Fluffy When he hears the dogs next door he just says "Hear the Doggies?" My Son's - Jeff and Lee by name My Grand Daughters by Name - Crystal, Kali and Dakota My Grand Sons by name - Skylar, Richard and Austin My Conure by name - Jake Himself - Dayo and sometimes even Dayo McQuilliams. I believe this is because he knows he is part of the "McQuilliams" flock and recognizes that is the Flock name with our respective individual first names within it.
  4. It's GreYt to have a room you can dedicate as a bird room. I would love nothing better than this for mine as well. Hopefully in the near future that will be a reality. Cages bother me as well, but many do not have the room to spare.
  5. Welcome Bartel's sister. Wow, you must have a ton of stories to share about Bartel. I am looking forward to hearing some of those and also seeing any photos or videos you may have of him.
  6. Wow, Joe is really getting with the program. The underlying principles of his cognitive understanding of the human language and applying it real-time of events or even transition of a certain length of time and wanting to know if Jay is ok clearly indicates just how truly intelligent these sentient and caring greys are. Joe obviously has a strong bond with Jay to fret over him as you indicate. Keep these updates coming!!!
  7. A wild caught grey has never been socialized and will be VERY difficult to get socialized and tamed to some extent. I hate to say this, but you may need find a new home for this grey that has a ton of experience in rescuing and dealing with very problematic wild caught greys such as this. It is going to take a lot of time, patience and this grey will never be like a hand raised bird. But, ultimately, this call is up to you. If your husband is getting upset, it is also adding fuel to the fire.
  8. The first molt is always the largest. Birds are instinctively programmed to deal with molts and proper feather care. In other owrds the are the masters and we are the fretting Parronts. Bathing everyday is not a good idea and will remove the all important feather protective coatings and dry out the skin if you are truly getting him soaked to the bone. Bathe 2 to 3 times week and always make sure you soak him with 100 percent Aloe juice by mistng thoroughly from a spray bottle after the water bath.
  9. Welcome and thanks for taking in a Grey in need of a good and loving home. At 10 years old he he very mature and probably of a lot of unknown history. It sounds like you already know it is just going to take a lot of patience and love while making him feel comfortable and safe in his totally new surroundings, family and possibly even other pets and parrots in the home. We have a very broad and diverse range of experienced parrot owners on this forum that are always more than happy to help or just have idea's bounced off them when needed.
  10. I'm with Steve on this, defo molting.
  11. Do you have Parrots. if so please share your story.
  12. Contact calling is completely normal and instinctual. In the wild, losing ones flock almost always means certain death. Thus, when they lose sight of the flock, they will start contact calling and listening to find the direction the flock is in. They are hard wired to always go with the flock. They will use any chirp, whistle. words or sound they know. Using the phone ring is one of the first things these intelligent creatures use once they have learned that it rings and you go get it. Isn't that just too smart? One thing we have always done, is describe where we are going in the house. Of course many times Dayo is on our shoulder as we go to whatever room it is. After a while, when you say for example I have to go work on the computer, they will know exactly where you are going because they have been there as well. They will still call for a while and may even tell you to "Turn off the computer" or that they need a drink of water etc. as they through their best reasoning and manipulative abilities out there to get you to come to where they are. Isn't life with a Grey a full of new surprises each day?
  13. Beautiful tribute. A loss lie this is always so heart wrenching. Jojo was very relaxed and happy in your home. Now over the rainbow bridge, you have the wonderful memories of your time together when all was well.
  14. Nice photos. They certainly enjoy boxes.
  15. Continued: Misty’s screaming also appeared to stimulate an occasional screaming behavior in Tarah as well. Fortunately because he had a strong reinforcement history for a whistle, I simply waited for him to offer a whistle before I would respond. Tarah quickly returned to offering a whistle and once again extinguished screaming. Misty also would on occasion scream for my attention while I was in the room. When this occurred, I simply left the room. Again my thought process was to teach her that screaming now created the opposite response. Instead of people coming to her, people go away. It was also important to reinforce her with attention at times for being quiet while I was in the room as well. Overall training misty to present silence to gain my attention took about 6 weeks to train. Obviously this was longer than it took to change Tarah's behavior. This could have been a result of the strength of the behavior in each bird based on their individual positive reinforcement histories. It could have also been a result of the fewer training sessions applied to Misty during the given amount of time. It could also be a factor of the birds as individual learners. In any case the end result was a bird that successfully learned to present desired behavior for attention as opposed to the undesired behavior of screaming. I went through the emotional gamut that many companion parrot owners face when addressing screaming problems. However by focusing on good training strategy and allowing myself opportunities to relieve myself of the stress associated with addressing the problem I was able to attain my desired training goal. Screaming for attention is a behavior problem with a solution. Set yourself up for success and invest the time to train the desired behavior. The end result can be a lifetime of good behavior. Tips to address screaming for attention Extinguish screaming. Reinforce any other behavior besides screaming. Remember the extinction burst is a good sign! The end might be insight. Change your feeling from frustrated to hopeful when your bird really goes for it. If you need to leave the room, but can’t focus on training, offer another positively reinforcing activity prior to leaving the room. This may buy you a short window of time to move freely between rooms without screaming behavior. However you will still need to include training sessions at some point. Get some earplugs to help you cope with the screaming during the extinction burst. Plan to wait in the other room. Prepare in advance a quiet activity you can do when trying to deal with a screaming session. Leave the room immediately when your bird screams for your attention. Manage your activities to help set yourself up for success. For example keep the lights off or your bird covered for a few extra minutes in the morning until you are prepared to deal with the screaming with good training strategies. Get support. If neighbors are having a problem with your screaming parrot, explain to your neighbors that you are working on training your bird not to scream. Count seconds in intervals of silence and increase if possible. Focus on fixing the problem instead of your frustration. Believe you will get there. This strategy does work. Keep notes if necessary to determine how and when this behavior maybe getting reinforced. Eliminate any reinforcement of screaming. Offer even more reinforcement for the desired behavior than the undesired behavior would normally receive in the past.
  16. UGH ok, here is a copy/paste: “Screaming. Somebody reinforced the heck out of that behavior.” I said to myself. Misty, a double yellow headed Amazon parrot, lived with me for only a few weeks. She was there so that I could put some of her vocal behaviors on cue. However it quickly became apparent she had a few other behaviors that needed to be addressed first. Before her stay with me she resided with Jill Bell for six years. Prior to that time her history is pretty fuzzy. She is estimated to be 19 years old. This meant screaming could have been reinforced for at least 13 years. It must have been, because it was STRONG. Misty was relentless. I’d leave the room; she’d scream and scream and scream. She had been a good reminder of what companion parrot owners experience when faced with a very annoying and challenging problem. It can be very frustrating. Oddly enough, when I walk into someone else’s home and hear screaming birds I am usually not effected. But when a bird is screaming specifically, in what feels like a demanding way, to get my attention, it strikes a nerve. How does one find the patience to be a good trainer in those situations? It is not easy, but definitely necessary. My mantra with Misty was “I am solving the problem. Getting angry or letting that knot in my gut sway my strategy will not give me the desired results. I am confident what I am doing will work. It has worked before with other birds I have trained. Hang in there!” And it is true, my blue fronted Amazon parrot Tarah also learned to scream for attention. Completely through my own ignorance I reinforced screaming. I acquired Tarah, as many people do, when he was offered to me for free. At the time I was working in a veterinary hospital. One of my co-workers also worked part time in a pet store. Someone had walked in off of the street and sold her the bird for $100. Was the bird stolen, smuggled or desperately unwanted? I don’t know. My co-worker found she was overwhelmed with too many animals in her home and asked if I would be interested in watching the bird for awhile. (That “while” has turned in 18 years.) Once in my apartment I was thrilled when Tarah offered a “hello” at the sight of me snacking on a piece of bread. However the enchantment wore off as Tarah began to scream anytime I was out of sight. Unaware of how to stop this undesired behavior, I did as many do, I ran back into the room each time Tarah screamed and told him to “Be quiet.” Did it work to stop the screaming? No, and at the same time I found I very much disliked my attempts at punishing reactions to the undesired behavior. I so enjoy having animals respond positively to my presence and did not want to become an unpleasant experience in my bird’s life in order to stop the screaming behavior. While in the middle of dealing with this problem, I was introduced to the book “Don’t Shoot the Dog” by Karen Pryor. (Also known as the bible of animal trainers) As I read the book, I latched onto two important principles that could help me address the screaming problem. Extinction and differential reinforcement. Extinction is described as the process of discontinuing reinforcing a behavior that has been previously reinforced. In other words part of my strategy should include discontinuing offering reinforcement for screaming. This meant I should no longer run back into the room, or yell at Tarah. The book did not describe the exact situation I was experiencing with my bird. Rather it described the principles and how to apply them to a variety of examples, human and animal. In reading the words, I made the connection that the concepts could apply to any behavior I no longer wanted to continue. Paired with the principle of extinction was the strategy of differential reinforcement of an alternate behavior. In other words, if screaming would no longer work to get a response from me, what would? For Tarah this turned out to be a whistle. In the middle of a session of screaming and me doing my best to ignore this undesired behavior, Tarah offered a “whistle”. I immediately reinforced this by responding with the word “good”. Tarah replied with a scream. This was because at this point he only had one repetition of whistling being positively reinforced and entire of year of screaming being reinforced. However I remained consistent with my strategies and within two weeks time Tarah learned to whistle instead of scream when he wanted a response from me. 17 years later Tarah whistles when he wants to know where I am, when he desires a toy or treat, when I come home, and when he simply seems to be “happy”. The undesired screaming behavior was extinguished and replaced with a whistling sound. Misty seemed to throw a kink in our now peaceful, well behaved and relatively quiet household. I “knew” from my past experience that I could repeat the process I had implemented with Tarah. However this time proved to be a bit more challenging. Because I was working out of the home at the time, it meant no breaks from dealing with the behavior problem. Every time I left the room I was challenged with having to be focused on training this bird. I was finding this to be very demanding. In addition there were times in the day when mentally I was just not prepared to train. Rather than feeling inspired to train and ready to resolve the behavior problem, I found myself dreading having to leave a room and work with Misty. I decided I needed to better set myself up for success. In getting to know Misty, who other than the screaming behavior, I found to be a delight, I learned that in the past she was accustomed to being covered at night. I took advantage of this and decided to leave Misty covered during the time in the morning I needed to shower and prepare breakfast and bird diets in the kitchen. This allowed me time to peacefully attend to necessary tasks in the morning. After this, I found I was less stressed and more prepared to begin a training session with Misty. Throughout the day I would treat each time I left the room for whatever reason as a learning opportunity for Misty. I practiced my strategy of extinguishing screaming by not responding to it, followed by reinforcing a desired behavior. In Misty’s case the desired behavior was not a specific sound. Instead I chose to reinforce silence. My plan was to reinforce small increments of time of silence and gradually increase the duration Misty was silent before I would reinforce her with my presence or attention. If I was in the kitchen I would wait just outside of her view while she screamed. At first if she offered a pause in screaming that seemed the slightest second longer than what she had presented in between screams in the past, I would quickly appear and offer generous amounts of attention. I wanted quiet to receive a greater amount of positive reinforcement than screaming if I could. Overtime I gradually increased the amount of time she remained quiet before I would respond. And it worked! However this was not without challenges. There were times throughout the day when a training session was not convenient for me when I needed to leave the room. Rather than cover Misty I opted for engaging her in other acceptable activity. For example, I often offered Misty a small cardboard box, a rolled up ball of newspaper, a new toy, or a portion of her diet just prior to leaving the room. This gave Misty another activity to focus on instead of screaming. But it also was not an opportunity for Misty to learn that screaming would not gain my attention and quiet would. It was still important to include training sessions throughout the day. The other activity was meant only to offer a break from training for me. This may have also lengthened the amount of time it took overall to teach Misty that screaming no longer would work. Another challenge in training Misty was that Tarah was in the same room as Misty. Tarah would whistle at times when I left the room. While I wanted to respond to his whistle, I did not want to also then accidentally reinforce Misty’s screaming. My strategy had to be to only reinforce Tarah’s whistle if Misty was not screaming. If I was focused on the training session, I also found I could position myself so that Tarah could see me, but Misty could not. This allowed me to reinforce Tarah’s “good” behavior and wait for Misty to offer silence before responding to her.
  17. It's GreYt to hear of such progress. They definitely know how to use "Tools" as many birds do. It's wonderful Charlie found such a loving and patient home. Nice photo and thanks for sharing this.
  18. Ok, here is a link to a professional behavorist I absolutely follow her advice when I need help with something. Her name is Barbara Heidenreich and is long time pro at this: http://goodbirdinc.blogspot.com/2008/05/stop-you-parrot-from-screaming-for.html I hope you find this useful. AS in her experience, it may take weeks, especially with 2 birds reinforcing each other as well.
  19. Unfortunately the only thing you can do is ignore it. I know it must be driving you crazy, but that is all you can do. If you give in, he wins and learns to do it even more. One thing to try is covering the cage when he screams constantly and see if he stops, after he has stopped for a while take the cover off. If he starts screaming again, place the cover back on. They are smart and hopefully will learn quickly that screaming does not get the result they are wanting. One thing I want to make clear though, is do not leave them covered all the time. It is not healthy for them nor stimulating. It is to only be used as a short covering until the screaming stops, then take it off.
  20. Happy B-Day Jay. I wish you well and hope it is made a special day for you.
  21. What a great post Penny! How very true your words are. I know I am a very opinionated person and have a fiery personality to go with it as well. I still have flairs up's every once in a while, but try to just "let it go" because there is noting earth shattering that will happen if I do and really, it's mainly just my opinion barring something that is true and could harm a person, pet etc. I just let it go. Not always.. I am still a work in progress and will be until I die. But many times I chose to take the path of "If I don't have anything positive to say, I just don't say anything". I am several decades old and being the personality I have always been, it is always an internal struggle sometimes and will be until I die. But if I don't keep it in check I hurt others and do not like that feeling later down the road when looking back. It seems as I age, the more I ponder on how I could have handled things better. Thanks for sharing your thoughts on this.
×
×
  • Create New...