T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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488.1 | COCKATIEL BLUES | BRAT::BOURGAULT | | Wed Jan 23 1991 16:27 | 38 |
| Frances,
It sounds like your little girl has taken a fancy to you more than
your husband and prefers to be with you. It is quite common for
a bird to bond with one individual. I had a similar experience
when I purchased my Yellow Nape Amazon. I searched everywhere to
find the right bird and when I finally got him, he chose to bond
with my husband instead of me! He adores him and will only tolerate
me when he is not around...otherwise I will receive a nasty nip
from him. (By the way, I am not sure whether my Yellow Nape is a
male or female). Are you sure that your cockatiel is a female?
Many times the bird will bond with a person of its opposite sex
however that is not always the case.
I have an older male cockatiel (12yrs.)that loves women and
he would have nothing to do with my husband. Each evening I would
take him into the livingroom and let him explore the couch when
we watched television. He would always want me to rub his head
and if I was pre-occupied with my needlework he would venture over
to my husband and quietly sit on his leg. Finally he edged his
way to his chest and found that my husband would whistle softly
to him which he LOVED! Now he likes my husband as much if not
more than me. But it took several months to accomplish this.
You can never tell what they are going to do next.
I can relate to your husband's hurt feelings, for my Yellow Nape
abandoned me for my husband, but she may come around and befriend
him again as she matures. I would suggest that you consider clipping
her wings though.
Best of luck and keep us updated on your progress!
Regards,
Denise
If you want to keep her manageable, you may just want to clip her
wings. That way she becomes much more docile and less independent.
If they know that they can fly , they will! Most of my pet cockatiels
are wing clipped.
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488.2 | SOMETIMES IT'S CYCLICAL | SVCNET::BUCCIERI | | Wed Jan 23 1991 16:54 | 23 |
| Hi,
Denise in note .1 is very correct in her explanation of what is
happening. I had a similar situation where I had purchased two
birds at the same time ..... a Lutino cockatiel that I purchased
for my wife and a Yellow Collared Mini-Macaw for myself. The birds
had a different perception however. The cockatiel bonded with me
and the macaw to her. I was crushed ..... it wasn't supposed to happen
this way. Anyway, that was two years ago and with patience and
understanding the situation has reversed itself. Astro, my mini
is my buddy.
I guess the key to it is to understand that there is always a chance
that this will happen. When it does it is prudent not to force a
change in the other direction. It does hurt and I can sympathize
with your husband. By the way, buying another cockatiel for your
husband may not be a good idea either. Cockatiels are very social
birds and they may totally reject both of you for the companionship
of each other.
I hope this helps.
Jim Buccieri
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488.3 | Normal Behavior | CSOA1::DIRRMAN | | Fri Jan 25 1991 09:24 | 24 |
|
Hello Denise,
I think most people that have more than one bird find how they
can be so very different and take to different people! We have
2 cockatiels - a cinnamon (Casanova) and a normal grey (Samantha),
and a Blue Crowned Conure. Sam loves only me and goes after my son
and tolerates my husband. Casanova loves everyone - and will let
anyone pet and rub his neck. Casper loves Only my husband. Even tho
I am the one that feeds and takes care of him. He barely tolerates
me. But that is what makes birds neat!!
Casanova was an experiment. I know the breeder - so when he was only
a week old I started by picking him up and rubbing his back and just
holding him. I tried to do it as often as I could and she did the
same. The babies were all fed by the parents up till they were 5
weeks old and then I finished with two hand feedings a day. Casanova
is the most loving bird I have ever seen. I can put him on his back
and scratch his tummy - rub his neck - rub him all the way down his
tail feathers (all tiels seem to be touchy about their tail feathers).
That might be an option - if you can find a breeder that you
could work with. Just know that that is Normal behavior for birds
of all types.
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488.4 | Caffined Cockatiel | LACV01::BUCHANAN | Life should have a soundtrack | Fri Nov 22 1991 10:08 | 10 |
| I came out of the shower this AM to find my female lutino perched on
the edge of my coffee cup, slurping away. It contained coffee and
cream only, no sugar. Does anyone else's bird like coffee? Is this
harmful for them (any more so than for humans)? I've read that sugar
is a no-no, but what about caffine? Sunshine is already the most hyper
cockatiel I've ever seen, so she probably doesn't need the buzz, but
she did seem to be enjoying it an awful lot.
Opinions?
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488.5 | | SWAM1::PEDERSON_PA | i got caught in a gravity storm | Fri Nov 22 1991 13:48 | 7 |
| Our conure (Pancho) shows signs of *real* interest around
the coffee cups on the endtables. I've been reluctant to let him
perch on the cup and sip (luke,luke warm of course) coffee. If
I walk by the cage with coffee, I see his little eyes following the
cup :-)
I'd be interested, too, in finding out if coffee is harmful.
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488.6 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | If U can't fix it, duct it! | Fri Nov 22 1991 16:19 | 7 |
| We made the mistake of mixing the hand feeding formula in a coffee cup
all the time when we were hand feeding our first babies about 6 months
ago. After that, we couldn't have a cup of coffee without the birds
going crazy in their cage and we could NEVER have a cup while they were
out!!!
Chris D.
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488.7 | We are soooo easy! | CSOA1::DIRRMAN | | Mon Nov 25 1991 09:28 | 8 |
|
Our Congo Grey, 2 of our tiels, and our Conure LOVE Coffee - also love
Coke. Actually - They love Almost anything that We like. But Coffee is
a real favorite! We try to keep it to a minimum as I would guess that
it is not really good for them . My coffee is black and my husbands
has all the junk in it - so it is not just the cream and/or sugar.
But - the little buggers lean off their cages and make all sorts of
raket if we don't give them a little. Who has who trained?????
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488.8 | Vet said no. | SHALOT::TAYLOR | Liver long and prostate - 393-7368 | Mon Nov 25 1991 12:29 | 4 |
| For what it is worth, my Vet said absolutely NO caffine.
I haven't seen anything in print though.
Doug
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488.9 | true confessions :-) | USHS05::VASAK | Sugar Magnolia | Tue Dec 03 1991 13:17 | 30 |
|
I'd be worried about giving birds caffienated beverages, too. Their
little respiratory and circulatory systems seem to be in high gear to
begin with!
On the other hand, a taste for coffee or cola seems to be common for
lots of birds - I've seen more umbrella cockatoos (mine included!) dive
for coffee cups than I can count!
On weekends, Layla (my umbrella) and BooBoo (my citron) have brunch and
extended playtime with us. They get to eat scrambled eggs, or
pancakes, or french toast, or some other goodie, and hang on the sofa,
get petted to excess, watch TV, plague the dog, torment weekend guests,
etc. Ever since Layla became obnoxiously interested in our coffee cups
(and she is a 'too, so "obnoxious" is probably an understatement!) to
the point of occasionally pulling them out of our hands (!) we looked
for a workable solution. Displacement (giving her fruits, nuts, chewy
toys) sometimes worked, but more often results in the object being
thrown across the room. When that doesn't do the trick, I sometimes
make her a *tiny* amount of instant *decaf* coffee (a special little
jar, just for her!) with lukewarm water in a paper hotcup. She will
drink the little bit of decaf, and then she and BooBoo are kept
occupied for at least 20 minutes shredding the paper cup into the
living room carpet and the sofa cushions :-)
Yeah, yeah, I know, she's spoiled, and I'm well-trained!
/Rita
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488.10 | | HYEND::C_DENOPOULOS | UP all night with Rhonda! | Tue Dec 03 1991 15:15 | 6 |
| Speaking of what not to give the birds, I was told this past weekend
never to give a cockatiel Avacado or Chocolate. I would never give
mine chocolate anyway, but I didn't know avacados were bad. She said
avacados will kill them, and chocolate acts like a poison to them.
Chris D.
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488.11 | | USHS05::VASAK | Sugar Magnolia | Tue Dec 03 1991 18:23 | 8 |
|
Well, actually, Chris, it is not the avocado itself, but any bits of
the brown "skin" from the avocado pit, or any part of the pit itself
that is poisonous. Because there may be bits of that "stuff" clinging
to the avocado that are too small to see (but big enough to do damage!)
it is really best not to give any at all.
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488.12 | But I love avocado sandwiches | BTOVT::CACCIA_S | the REAL steve | Wed Dec 04 1991 10:34 | 15 |
|
Hi Chris,
we must have been talking to the same person!!!!! The bird vet we found
also warned us against Avocado. He said the skin and seed are bad
enough but the plant and leaves are especially poisonous. My wife has
two or three avocado trees around the house and of course the first place
Cassie heads for is the top of one of them. (we never gave him a chance
to eat any of it though and after we spoke to the vet we moved the trees
to another part of the house where cassie is not alowed. (behind closed
doors)
Cassie by the way for the rest of you is a Gray cockatiel that I bought
from Chris.
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