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i want to be able to hold him but he bit me the other day. and drew blood... how do i get him to stop biting too?

2006-10-05 15:47:28 · 7 answers · asked by Louiebaby 1 in Pets Birds

7 answers

~~~yea same shi* happen to me with mine he kept running away ans picking at me but i kept puting my hand back in the cage and eventually the both of us got used to it you just have to dust ur self off and try again. after that he learned to respect me play got on top of me and trust me i got a lot of peck and bloody hands but it was all worth it, at the end of the day he was the best bird ever. just keep trying there is no wat to stop himfrom biting unless you want to hurt that bird, which i sugges you don't.~~~

2006-10-06 12:58:03 · answer #1 · answered by EiaMaria 3 · 0 0

those birds improve quite fond of their vendors and desire to be with you. I by no potential clipped my birds wings so he could continuously fly on my shoulder when I located him on precise of his cage and we'd watch television jointly. yapping is an hassle-free concern for youthful cockatiels. mine acted the comparable way as quickly as I first have been given him. i don't have an hassle-free answer for you different than to assert he will improve out of it. additionally some people say cover your birds so as that they might get a good nights sleep. my chook hated being coated. in case you're overlaying him try no longer overlaying him and spot what happens. i develop into in easy terms 5 as quickly as I have been given my first cockatiel and seeing as he had a floor cage in my room each and every time he started yapping i could ease his cage out into the corridor. a draft loose corridor techniques you. at last i did no longer would desire to try this anymore and each and every time i grew to become the lighting fixtures off i does no longer hear a peep out of him until eventually the sunlight develop into shining for the duration of the window. he remains a candy little guy. 17 years going good

2016-10-02 00:01:22 · answer #2 · answered by wiemer 4 · 0 0

My first two cockatiels that I got 10 years ago (still have to I must say) were 3 years old at the time. There previous owner never let them out of the cage.

With cockatiels you really need to be patient well really any bird. Talk to your bird. Let them get to know your voice, try and put your hand in and if they bite back off for a while. Don't do it to the point of making them very angry. Another thing I did firstly was stuck my hand in there for a while, but didn't try to pick them up. Only for them to see my hand and that I wasn't going to hurt them. See you need to teach them that you are not going to hurt them. That is why they bite, there scared/mad and that is there only way of letting you know leave me alone.

Well my 2 birds they let me pick them up ALL the time now without any biting....well normally not. Sometimes a bird even if they trust you will snap at you. This indicates they are tired and want to be left alone. Don't force them onto you. That is like someone trying to make you stand up when your sleeping and don't want to get up. You would be kind of cranky to! Well at least I know I would be!

Anyways it can take some time. Whatever you do please don't get upset with them for biting, yell or point your finger at them as "if" you are going to hit them but yet of course you never would, but you might do it just because they made you mad. Not sure if that made sense or not, just heard of people doing this. If you do these things you will break any trust you have been thus far with your birds.

It is very important to let your birds out daily, but yet with you in the area in case one fly’s and hurts themselves. Because of this never leave them out alone. Make sure that you have there wings trimmed by a vet only because most people do not know how to cut birds wings and if you don't and try you can kill your bird. Lastly get an inexpensive sheet from say target and put it on the back 1/2 of the cage. This gives your birds a place to hide if they want to. This is very important because a completely open cage can give them a sense of no security.

Be patient, be kind, talk to them, let them out of there cage daily, play with them (once the trust is there keep it), etc.

Do these things and in no time your bird should learn to trust/love you! But all birds are different in how long this can take, because it can take a while. This isn't something that will happen in a week or even 2.

Good Luck to you! Feel free to email if you have further questions I will do my best to answer you!

2006-10-05 17:17:14 · answer #3 · answered by Pam 5 · 2 1

You just have to keep at it and let him get used to your hands. Once he stops running away, a good way to get him to sit on your finger is to point your finger out parallel with the bar that he sits on (if he sits on a bar), and gently push your finger against his belly so you're pushing him backwards off the bar. When it gets to the point where he's going to fall off, he'll instinctively hop onto your finger. It's a good trick, worked with my budgie. Good luck, I hope he warms to you soon : )

2006-10-05 16:52:35 · answer #4 · answered by ? 5 · 0 1

Well you just have to keep working with him, he has to get used to human touch. but some cockatiels just dont like to be held, especially if they where not tamed when young.

2006-10-05 16:12:24 · answer #5 · answered by kyle b 1 · 0 1

persistence always works!

2006-10-05 16:59:58 · answer #6 · answered by Bulla 2 · 0 1

read this site...helps alot...it help me with mine

2006-10-06 03:49:05 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 1

fedest.com, questions and answers