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He knows step up, and sometimes he'll do it and sometimes he'll fluf up and peck at me...
He'll also sulk for about an hour after I handle the other dove, whom he loves very much.
He sometimes likes to be petted, and sometimes would rather just sit there...

2007-02-22 08:09:18 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Pets Birds

4 answers

Keep it Positive
The key to training your dove is to keep the interaction positive. Three concepts provide the basis for dove training:

dove does something good --> give a reward
dove does something undesirable --> ignore it
Never punish your dove
Obviously, this is a bit simplistic, but your goal is to shape your bird's behavior into what you want by a giving a reward for good things and ignoring (no reward, no reaction) for bad things.

The reward can be a favorite food treat, but simple praise or a play session with a treasured toy can be good motivation for some birds. If your bird is doing something undesirable, you must simply ignore the bird (your bird will not respond to punishment). A negative reaction can turn into a reward if your bird is looking for attention (negative attention is better than no attention), so you must be careful not to unintentionally cause some undesirable behaviors to increase due to your reaction. Ignoring behavior might first cause it to intensify, but eventually the undesirable behavior will most likely stop. How you approach training can help keep training positive:
Train only when you are relaxed. Positive training does take patience!
Pick a time when your bird is attentive and not distracted by eating, preening, or household activity.
Frequent, but short, training sessions are generally more effective. A few minutes at a time, several times a day, works well.
Pick a favorite reward (but don't overdo it if it is food).
Once your bird catches on to something, don't give a treat every time (switch to praise part of the time) or your bird may only do the behavior if he/she knows you have a treat handy.
End each session on a positive note. Wait for a successful attempt or at least a good try at whatever you are training, give a treat, and move on to something else.
Keep training sessions upbeat and fun for your bird.
Very Basic Training: Step Up and Step Down
If you had to choose only two things to teach your parrot, these would be then ones to pick. This means training your dove to step up onto your finger or wrist (or hand-held perch) on command, and then step back off again. These are relatively easy and extremely important skills to teach. Stepping up is quite a natural movement for a bird so it is generally easy to train this on command (stepping down is a bit trickier to teach). Getting your bird to step up and step down on command makes handling much easier and helps you to set some boundaries for your bird (for example, you can more easily remove your bird from areas of you home that are not bird-proofed, return a bird back to his or her playgym or cage, etc.). If you have a baby bird, he or she is probably pretty cooperative but starting early with the step up and step down commands is still a good idea. Not only does training a cooperative baby allows you to give lots of positive reinforcement, it sets a good foundation for training more skills to your bird in the future.

2007-02-22 08:22:20 · answer #1 · answered by allyalexmch 6 · 0 0

I definitely have been raising ringneck doves for just about 12 years now - I feed mine wild chook seed combination and combine in some safflower seeds and crushed up nuts in it. they do no longer choose cuttle bones or grit, yet they do love baths - I definitely have a large aviary outdoors and ideal now have approximately 20 doves. Their time-honored waterer is a gallon sized hen waterer, yet earlier I had maximum of (they are going to hatch babies year around in case you enable them to), they drank from time-honored rabbit bottles - those that carry on the cage and characteristic the little balls interior the stems to permit the water pass. interior the summertime I positioned a large pan of water of their cage (approximately 2-3 inches deep, yet no longer if there are chicks in there) and that they are going to all savour a bathtub. Captive doves are very trusting, so make advantageous yours are risk-free from cats and different predators! solid luck!

2016-11-25 00:24:38 · answer #2 · answered by bickley 4 · 0 0

Just let him out and get used to people and pet and hold him every day.
P.S. Its easier if its a baby but nothings impossible!
I tamed my 2 Zebra Finches and more!!

2007-02-22 08:53:26 · answer #3 · answered by LivingInnuendo~♫ 3 · 1 0

its a bird let it be, if you want it to listen to you buy a cat thatll shut it up and make it listen lol hmm sitck with a pet goldfish,u dont have to train them

2007-02-22 08:17:51 · answer #4 · answered by deep 2 · 0 1

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