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Timbersmom

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Everything posted by Timbersmom

  1. What a sweet video! Thanks for sharing Good luck and God bless
  2. Thanks, that's advice I need. I will give it a try!
  3. I have allergies myself. A lot of people are allergic to the dust mites in dust and to certain types. There is a good chance the "dust" from your bird won't affect your brother-in-law.
  4. So sorry to hear about DJ! My thoughts and prayers are with you.
  5. Yikes Wingy! 19 Here when we got up and I thought it was hideous. 47 now though so I'll stop complaining. So ready for summer!
  6. Following up on what Dan said, when I first brought Timber home (like the first two days) he would step up. After that, he wouldn't step up for a couple of months. That is referred to as the "honeymoon" period. Don't be discouraged if he starts refusing to step up. He'll come around in time. As Dan said, slower is better and patience wins the day!
  7. We were just having a discussion yesterday about "biting." I'm assuming there are times when they don't realize how painful their bites are for us? It is pretty obvious when they bite in fear or anger (I've received both). But when we are interacting, Timber likes to put my finger in his beak and run it back and forth. Then he will rub his beak around on my hand and "nibble" for lack of a better word. A couple of times, he has bitten me (not bad but uncomfortable) and I'm assuming it was not intended to hurt me, but was unintentionally hard. Maybe I'm just giving him the benefit of the doubt, but his body language and actions just weren't the same as when he is really "trying" to bite me. Is that correct?
  8. Fortunately, we live in a big old house and noise levels aren't a concern. I'm grateful for that because he will continue to vocalize until I get downstairs. After I respond, he changes to other whistle patterns and words that I assume are his "well hurry up I'm waiting" repertoire.
  9. Hello and welcome to you and Tyson Good luck and God bless!
  10. What a pretty bird Taffy is. I haven't seen a lot of cockatoos in person, but I remember that several of the ones I have seen are missing a lot of feathers. Taffy doesn't seem to have that problem!
  11. My brothers grows a patch of sweet corn for all of the family in season. That's great because at least I know it is pesticide free. I give Timber a piece and he loves picking off every grain. I'm not sure that he eats much, but he has a fine time making a mess with it!
  12. The most obvious, I would think, would be the contact calls. Timber uses certain sounds in certain situations. I.e. his whistle when he hears me getting up (upstairs, he is downstairs) is the same every morning. I assume that is his "location" call, letting me know where he is so I can get there.
  13. Truth there. If nothing else, having a parrot teaches most of us to be gracious losers
  14. Guess it depends on the audience. If you are writing a scientific document, you need to back it up with facts. If you are writing for a specific group (like other parronts), I think it is fine to write from your interpretation of Dayo's thoughts from your perspective. Personally, I enjoy your "thoughts on his thoughts."
  15. I'll work on this next week at work (where my software is). Maybe I'll try youtube! Thanks Dan.
  16. It is the first video I've posted, so I thought there was a good chance I'd messed it up! Thanks for checking luvparrots
  17. Argh, I hope that isn't true. It is on photo bucket. Anyone else having trouble?
  18. LOL I wouldn't be surprised at all! Timber will spend a lot of time trying to lure the cats over to the cage so he can get his beak on them. He takes joy in waiting until they are all in the room with him and making a very loud, indescribable sound so they all jump and run. He also throws almond shells and anything else at them that he can. Then there are times when I really think he sees them as flock members!
  19. Others with more experience can be more helpful, but I CAN tell you that it takes time. It takes a lot more time for a grey to adapt and get comfortable than you realize. Have you read the rehome stories on the forum? They would probably give you a lot of help and ideas. Good luck!
  20. LOL to the "kiss a horse" analogy. Haaaa.
  21. Interesting about Gus! Sounds like you found his "sweet spot." I've noticed with Timber that messy as he is, if it is something he really, really likes (like hard cheese or a little strip of steak) he doesn't drop a crumb.
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