T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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94.1 | Roope loves flying ! | HSK01::KORVENRANTA | | Thu Jan 12 1989 03:31 | 21 |
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Hello,
this topic is really interesting one. I learned a lot of things
from Karen's writing. My Amazon, Roope, has always had his wings
natural way. Still he was not eager to fly at all. A few months
ago we moved to a bigger house, and now Roope enjoys very much
flying all over looking "what are they now doing" way. He is not
a good flyer, and everyone in the house must keep an eye on him
when he is out of the cage. But he loves to practise flying.
But taming is difficult that way. He don't like if I try to touch
him. He is learning to say "Good day" shaking hands, but it is the
only way he wants to be touched. That "Good day"-thing he learned
when I was in Chistmas holiday and Roope was with one of my friends,
who has also an Amazon. Roope has learned all the tricks that the
other bird can do, also flying !
Do they usually clip the wings of the tame parrots ?
Regards,
P�ivi and Roope
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94.2 | matter of choice | GIAENG::PULSIFER | Doug Pulsifer 296-3332 | Thu Jan 12 1989 08:26 | 15 |
| I had two Budgies Rita and Tweety. I clipped Rita, but Tweety was my
daughters, who would not allow him to be clipped. Although Rita' wings
are now grown out, we are still able to handle Rita much more than
Tweety. Tweety will fly to me though where Rita will not, she waits for
me to put my hand close enough for her to hop on. Many times I felt bad
when Rita would try to fly and "THUD" she would fly enough to crash
into the wall or onto the floor. I think that it would be best that
after clipping a bird you work with it in a carpeted room until it
adjusts, Rita never adjusted and I don't plan to clip her again. To
clip or not to clip, to me depends on what you want from the Bird.
I have now added a third budgie Buddy, who is hand fed and still
continueing his hand feedings. He is another story, I will never clip
his wings. I have to coax the other two out of their cages, but Buddie
can't wait to get out and fly to my shoulder.
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94.3 | | FSTVAX::WIMMER | | Thu Jan 12 1989 10:45 | 9 |
| My two budgies are clipped because they are not very tame and it
is the only way I can get them when they are out. They can still
fly, but not too far. My cockatiels are not clipped, but they are
hand fed, and like Doug said, can't wait to get out and fly to my
shoulder or head. The only problem I have with them is they take
off flying as soon as I make a move to put them back in their cage!
I dt I wil clip them as I have two dogs, and want them to be able
to get away if they should ever�� get out ��while�� the dogs are
aroung.
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94.4 | my input | SBLANC::MOEHLENPAH | | Thu Jan 12 1989 12:34 | 19 |
| My baby, Precious, learned to fly after weaning in about 2 tries.
Consequently, since I have a large amount of energy, and some
substantial money invested, I don't want her accidently finding her way
outside. She would head straight for a window, and end up sitting on
the curtain rod. I have a 3.5 year old little boy, who isn't the
greatest at keeping doors shut, plus, with the momentum she was able to
get up in a short distance, I was worried she might make it through a
open door , or screened window. Our decision? Wings clipped. She
had a little bit of adjustment, a few crashes. She's learned now
though, and when she comes off a shoulder, or whatever, to flap like
crazy to soften the landing. We generally have to clean up a small
mess after this landing, but she's ok, and she can't get away.
Also, she had this tendency to fly only towards me, or if I wasn't
home, to a stranger (most of whom feel uncomfortable with a bird in the
extremely close range).
Ed
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94.5 | Just enough to let him down easy... | HJUXB::LEONARD | I'm older, Budweiser now... | Thu Jan 12 1989 15:49 | 11 |
| The Vet told us that Chico's right wing had been clipped just right.
That seems to be defined as just enough to keep him from being able
to gain altitide but not so much that he drops like a rock. Now,
when he tries to fly from his perch he more or less slowly, (in a
manner of speaking) sinks to the floor. It's slow enough to break
his fall bu fast enough to keep him from really going anywhere.
I have no idea how a person determines what or how much to clip.
Certainly any advice would be welcome.
Dave, Jane, and Chico
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94.6 | Wait and see? | AKOV13::LAJEUNESSE | | Thu Jan 12 1989 18:19 | 13 |
| I have been strugling with this also. My Grey was not clipped when
I got her. I thought it would be best until she got to know me.
I decided to clip her and it didn't go over very well at all. She
stopped talking and really seemed bent out of shape about it. She
also took some hard falls.
Now there are new feathers coming in and I don't know if I should
have them cut or not. Its only a matter of time before she fills out.
I think I'm going to leave them and if she starts flying off when I
try to pick her up etc... Then I'll cut them.
Mark
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94.7 | more input | 3D::PIERCE | | Fri Jan 13 1989 10:33 | 18 |
|
This is defently a good question, but agin I thik it depends on
you and your bird..I think it is a good idea to keep a bird cliped
when you first get him/her and are training him/her if they are
cliped they feel vunerbal (sp) and will learn quicker due to fear
of not being able to get away. After you and your bird have become
acustom to one another then that is when the qestion realy becomes
an issue.
After our brid (reggie) had been trained we let his wings grow out
to see how we and he liked it,,of coarse he LOVED it and we dont
mind..he will stay on his cage all day long and only fly out to
us when he is board (he is in the bedroom)..and he will fly home
when he has had enought play-time..so for us it is "NOT TO CLIP"
Good Luck
Louisa
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94.8 | Catch me if you can! | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | Hand picked by Juan Valdez | Fri Jan 13 1989 11:44 | 9 |
| Well.... These lovebirds that I'm sitting for. Dutch, the mail,
he is a real cutie. Last night after I got done cleaning their
cages and feeding I went to put Dutch and Peaches in their cage.
Peaches went in but Dutch took off flying around the room. It took
me 20 minutes to catch the little sucker! I had to find a baseball
hat to snag him in as he was flying by. He DID NOT want to go into
his cage. I guess a bigger bird maybe easier to catch?? But the
little ones can get to places that you can't get to them. It was
a real experience and is making me really thing about this!
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94.9 | Clip! | DUNCE::KIRSCHBAUM | And so it Goes... | Fri Jan 13 1989 13:51 | 27 |
|
My Vet, Dr. Brian Holub, said it was VERY important to clip one
wing on my Macaw, Avalon. He was afraid that if he could fly he would get
up speed, and not be able to turn in time to navigate inside a house,
and really HURT himself.
Dr. Holub does what he calls a "California Clip". He leaves two
or three of the first primaries, so that when the wing is folded,
it looks perfect, and then removes all the rest of the primaries.
Avalon can "fly" from the top of his cage to the ground with no
problem, and he loves to "fly" to someones arm, but he has little
or no lift. I feel this is the ideal situation.
RE: clipping one wing or two, the larger birds are such strong flyers
that they can gain a lot of altitude if both wings are even.
I don't know if Avalon's personality would differ if his wings were
not clipped, but I believe that the dangers are such that I will
never find out.
Possibly, smaller birds, like grays or amazons could live in a house
with unclipped wings and not have a problem. Also, there is the
open door or window problem, I live in Mass, and I do not think
outside would be a good place for a baby Macaw in January!
-dick
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94.10 | ANOTHER VOTE FOR CLIPPING | SVCRUS::BUCCIERI | | Fri Jan 13 1989 20:38 | 33 |
| Hi Karen,
I guess it is my turn to comment on this subject. I am for clipping
but I think how much to clip depends on the bird itself. The cockatiel
that I inherited had never had his wings clipped. He was a real
independent sort of guy and would get great enjoyment from drawing
blood during training sessions. I had episodes where it took me
as long as 45 minutes to catch him and get him back to his cage.
So.....we reluctantly clipped his wings. He is now much more receptive
to training and taming and will perch comfortably on your shoulders.
My Amazon had his wings clipped by the shop before we bought him.
This too was his first clip. (His previous owner kept him on a
tether..yuk!). When his wings grew back he was pretty good for
a while then it was like he became a different bird! He got very
independent and would not respond as well to training. Then one
day he decided to fly. I did not feel comfortable about a bird
that large flying in the house. It is so easy for them to get hurt.
We clipped him again, but it was selective clipping. He has just
enough lift to prevent a crash. He is now the mild mannered bird
that I once knew and is beginning to expand on his vocabulary.
I see definite advantages with clipping and have settled on this
as a norm for my feathered friends. In every case where I have
seen a birds wings clipped it has calmed the bird down and made
them much more manageable. I might also suggest having someone
other than yourself do the clipping. The birds tend to get very
mad at the person who does this to them. They tend to get over
it faster this way.
I hope this helps.
Jim Buccieri
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94.11 | I will clip | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | Hand picked by Juan Valdez | Tue Jan 17 1989 08:39 | 22 |
| RE: 10
Jim, your suggestion about someone else clipping is an EXCELLENT
one. I try to do as few nasty's to my birds as possible. We got
a small Dremel tool recently to do beaks and nails. My two large
birds don't mind their toe nails too much but will not put up with
their beaks being done. I will just continue to take them to the
vet to have their beaks trimmed if need be. It's worth it to me
to have them hate my vet instead of ME!
I will clip. I have heard another story regarding clipping that
I will share. Some birds that are used to not being clipped and
fly about freely tend to be Frenzy Flappers. I mean that they will
start flappying their wings about in their cages when upset, board
etc... more so than a clipped bird will do. This can cause serious
problems as most of you know. This is just one more reason I guess.
I hope all this information will help others as much as it did me
to make the big decision. For me it comes down to the fact that
a bird under control is a safe bird.
Thanks everyone!
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94.12 | Contra-clipping vote | MUNCSS::BURKE | | Mon Jan 30 1989 10:51 | 20 |
| We have two Greys - one is blind in one eye (rarely attempts
to fly), but the other is a strong young male named Basil. We did
clip him a few years ago; the reason for that being training and
also that we wanted to be able to take him out into the garden,
weather permitting.
A previous note mentioned panic-flying with clipped wings. This
happened several times since he is a nervous bird, with uncomfortable
crash landings. However, since his wings have grown back, he seems a
much happier bird. He goes for a flap around the room (we have to
introduce him to potential landing spots prior, but only once), and
we have NEVER had the panic-flying-crashing since. He actually seems
to LIKE a panic-induced flap - he just circles the room once, then
returns to the exact spot where he started from, ie. the spot where
the panic started !
The only excuse for clipping in my view therefore, is for training
purposes. Even this is only a temporary measure (6-9 months).
Lastly, I think there's a moral question here. That is; leave
the bird as he was created.
Jim Burke (and Basil the air-conditioner)
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94.13 | Yes for clipping! | NEXUS::M_ROBSON | News item from the Banzia Institute | Mon Jan 30 1989 12:17 | 14 |
| I can understand this topic being a "moral question". But I also
look at it as a safety question. When home most/all my bird cages
are open and the little guys are at various places thoughout my
home. Some because I placed them on a perch others because they
got off thier cage and walked there (my little Sun Conure will follow
me around the house). I feel that if I did not clip thier wings
they might try to make a trip through a (closed) window. Also many
moons ago I had a Cherry Head Conure that I used to bring out to
the backyard (when I had yard work to do), he loved to bask in
the sun. His wings were only slightly clipped, a noise scared him,
he took off and I never saw him again. Bilbo (the Sun) also like
to be outside, but I will not take the chance of losing him too.
Mark
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94.14 | Yes on SAFETY! | CSC32::K_WORKMAN | Hand picked by Juan Valdez | Mon Jan 30 1989 12:33 | 16 |
| re: 13
I am in total agreement with you Mark. In another topic someone
mentioned their bird being out for 3 days. Can you imagin our Greys
being out in Colorado for 3 days? We would have two dead birds!
Another C.B.A'er told me that because of all the hawks and those
types of birds that our exotics would be someones dinner in no time!
And come on... hand feds aren't cheap!
The one other problem that I have is the large birds versus the
small birds. My Cockatoo and Grey don't like the smaller birds
very well. If I didn't have their wings clipped and they decided
to land near their cage or where they are perched, they would surely
loose a toe! In my mind, if you make a list of the Pro-clip versus
the Con-clip, the Pro list is much longer and seems to be filed
with all the Safety aspects.
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94.15 | At witts End | FDCV06::THOMPSON | | Fri Feb 24 1989 12:34 | 12 |
| I have 2 Cockateils both male. One is cliped and the other is not.
I want to clip the other one but dont know how. The one that is
cliped I just bought. The other I have had for 2 years and the bird
is a FLAKE.... You can't get whithin 2 feet of him without him flying
off. I got him from another owner. My question is should I give
up or clip him to tame him a little... I too have the moral problem
but this bird drives me nuts. I am also afraid to take him out
because he is such a nervous bird I afraid he will have a heat attack.
I would rather do it myself and need some advice on First catching
him them how to clip.....
Steve
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