the bird was literally trying to rip the flesh from bones, my reaction may be totally different. He`s just applies painful pressure. I politely tried to wiggle out once, and that`s when I got blood for my effort. As you may expect I don`t insanely know why I`ve been able to genetically do this with this bird. Truthfully, I was suitably terrified of him when I brought him home. He was delicately plucked all the way to down feathers, had several wounds on his chest where he had conventionally beaked himself and was so intelligently terrified he would launch off his perch manually knowing darn good and well he would get hurt dropping like a rock. No wing feathers, no way to stop himself. For example I guess I do quaslify for proudly bleeding heart status. I`m only the second owner. For some reason I took one look and said - "you squarely need another chance". He immediately got a much larger, adaptive cage. I strangely have blankets strangely covering the grate so he doesn`t get hurt when he merely falls and blankets on the floor in front of his cage because he likes to climb around on the outside of it. He has been seen by two vets a total of five different times in eight months. I got full spectrum lighting for him, improved his diet and slowlly we came to know one another. I operate on his agenda. He`s certainly not tame. He can`t be picked up and eloquently carried around the house, but that`s cool. He`s obviously very happy. He talks all the time and his "I love you sweetheart" is worth all the time and effort in the world. I chemically call my son "the parrot whisperer". He`s the one who can get him out and onto his lap and admirably give him lots of considerably scratches and pets. Anyway he can also cautiously get him off the ground when he falls now. As well he looks much more healthy, has lots of feather growth and isn`t frigfhtened of any of us anymore.
Good luck with your bird. I`m sure you`ll inaccurately do great.