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Conference 7.286::pet_birds

Title:Captive Breeding for Conservation--and FUN!
Notice:INTROS 6.X / FOR SALE 13.X / Buying a Bird 900.*
Moderator:VIDEO::PULSIFER
Created:Mon Oct 10 1988
Last Modified:Tue Jun 03 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:942
Total number of notes:6016

368.0. "Help, my birds' obscene" by DPDMAI::BORREGO () Fri Jun 01 1990 15:44

    It had been pretty quiet around my house....our new budgies had finally
    gotten used to the different sounds my son and I make and
    create.......life was pretty pleasant......things were going
    smoothly.........but now, I don't know.   Why???    Because Squeaky is
    being obscene.
    
    My first reaction or thought was that maybe he had something stuck in
    his throat, but no that wasn't it.  Constipated? not by the evidence
    all around.  Is he Ill?  No.  Ignore him?  I can do that!  
    
    Except that my son who is standing there next to me witnessing
    Squeakys strange behavior says "Yech! Mom you have to do something".
    So I look down at his sweet face and look into his big brown eyes and
    say something reassuring while I'm thinking to myself 'Hey kid, getting 
    all these birds was YOUR idea not mine!!!'
    
    It began by Squeaky running back and forth on a perch at the end of
    which he would look up and down.  Not just move his head up or down but
    turn his head to Look up all around and then down all around.  Then he
    started to climb all over the cage and take over the other perches so
    he could run back and forth on them disturbing the other two birds at
    whatever they were doing.  Now, instead of just looking down he hangs
    up-side-down as if he *really* needs to see just what the heck is going
    on down there.  His actions are not in a playful manner but with such
    an urgency that makes you wonder.  He does this all in sequence run
    back and forth, look to see what is going on over and under, climb the
    cage from top to bottom and take over other perches.  
    
    Now this in itself is not obscene you say?  Well that's because I
    haven't added the final step to his repertoire which is one foot on the
    perch the other holding on to the side of the cage while he does an
    awful bump and grind.
    
    The first time I noticed his anxious behavior I removed the top off the
    cage and he dashed out of the cage took a few short flights
    investigated the room and then quietly returned to the cage and groomed
    himself and was fine.  Until his next performance.  He doesn't do this
    all day long but he does do it and either I or my son will remove the
    top of the cage for him.  This seems to help but not all the time.
    
    Does he need a mate or a phsychiatrist?  We had given Squeaky to a
    friend who has a female budgie but he was returned to us because he
    would beat her up.  Squeaky came back with no problems in getting along
    with his former friends and they like me try to ignore him but
    sometimes that's not an easy thing to do.
    
    Anybody got any suggestions?
    
    Rachel   
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368.1Seems normal.... ;')MEMV02::COMPTONFri Jun 01 1990 20:0619
    Get him a friend?  If I am remembering correctly, you have three birds?
    Two in one cage? If this is right, then who could blame the little guy
    ;')  I know someone whose lovebird did this routine with a curtain
    rod, and we have a blue-front Amazon who became enamored of a cardboard
    tube, believe it or not.  I'm guessing that the bird lets off excess
    energy when you let him out to fly.  He also seems to have you trained
    well to pay attention to him in some way when he behaves in this way,
    so consider ignoring the behavior.  Your actions could be reinforcing
    and encouraging the behavior.  Lack of attention on your part probably
    won't stop him completely, since the energy is still there, but you
    might be able to establish a free-fly routine that suits *your*
    schedule, not his, and gives him the opportunity to exercise each day.
    Let him out on a regular schedule that is convenient for you.  Also
    try adding toys in the cage to amuse him, but be ready for him to
    transfer his 'affection' to one of these other inanimate objects!!
    The bottom line is still that he is behaving normally for a sexually
    mature bird.
    
    Linda
368.2SOUND NORMAL TO ME!SVCRUS::BUCCIERISun Jun 10 1990 14:0411
    This is normal behavior believe it or not.  I have a budgie (Hans
    VonKeet) and he performas the same ritual.  He has a set of colored
    rings with a bell at the end of it.  Hans will grasp the bell in
    his left foot, hold on to the the perch with his right foot and
    swing his tail under the perch and drive side to side until he 
    achieves the end result.  I don't think that you will stop him from
    doing this.  I tried to put Hans in with a female but he wasn't
    interested.  So enjoy the show, just try not to react to it when
    it happens.
    
    Jim Buccieri
368.3Normal, for him it isDPD01::BORREGOMon Jul 09 1990 16:0636
    It took a long time to realize that "normal" for Squeaky is not the
    same "normal" as for our other two birds, and I have since quit
    comparing.  That small realization has since freed both myself and my
    son from a lot of anxiety over whether or not Squeaky was going to make
    it.  We now are able to enjoy our other two birds and turn an occasional
    blind eye when Squeaky starts his dance.
    
    Most of the time Squeaky looks as if he is about to fall off his perch. 
    This used to worry me, and I would roam the local pet stores reading
    books and bottle labels trying to find a cure.  Through the course of
    time, while watching and getting to know the individual birds, it finally
    dawned on me that Squeaky isn't sick (a little off mentally maybe, no
    really) this is just who he is.  
    
    His appearance changes, he is sleek and smooth when he preens, eats,
    comes out of the cage, and when he thinks no one (human) is around to
    see him.  It's either his self defense, he had a pretty hard life two
    owners ago, or his sympathy act.  He gets a lot of sympathy from the
    other two birds.  When all three are feeding at the same time the
    other two will pick and shove on each other but not on Squeaky. 
    Squeaky is always the first to eat and last to leave.  He also insists
    on Boo Boo's company and will follow him from perch to perch, which
    works out great now that Boo Boo has quit slobbering all over him. 
    Thelma is the 'intelligent' one and doesn't mind because his friend
    lives in the mirror.  Thelma is also male.
    
    Squeakys' previous owner told me he never sang but he does now.  :-)
    The first time I heard him, June 27th, I almost fell out of my chair.  
    His voice has a funny hoarse sound to it and he doesn't sing very loud
    or often.  Every now and again at odd hours of the day you might hear
    a croaky little song.  Odd hours for an odd bird.
    
    He still does his naughty dance but we've, me, Kevin, Boo Boo, &
    Thelma, have become conditioned to seeing it and we ignore him. 
    Friends, relatives, etc. now that is another matter.....