Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Big Thumbs Down to "Love Happens"

So we watched "Love Happens" yesterday, which is out on DVD. I actually
enjoyed the movie until it go to the end.

The Cockatoo scene got me in a ruckus. I did enjoy watching the cockatoo
dance around, chasing him, and being ADORABLE. But that's where the
happiness stops.

Ok people- First, that is an entirely inappropriately sized cage for a
bird of that size (and for really any bird). Not to mention it has no toys
or anything to do at all. Ok ok, I know it's a movie, but people think
movies are reality. Second, Cockatoos are not native to SEATTLE! THEY ARE
FROM AUSTRALIA! So even if they're a wild caught imported bird, that is
not their natural habitat and does not resemble it in any way. Third, you
can't just release an animal that you've had as a pet. They have no
earthly clue how to survive in the wild. Fourth, parrots don't have a
homing instinct like pigeons. They're not going to show back up at your
house. If you let your bird go, there's a 99.9% chance it's going to die.
Hopefully once it gets hungry it will find a human who is not an actual
idiot that will take care of it properly.

I just hate when films do this. It's like after Finding Nemo when all the
kids were flushing their fish down the toilet because they "lead to the
ocean."

Grrrrr!!!!!

Foraging Master of the Universe!

So Sid is now turning into a master forager at the beginnger level stuff
I've been doing to teach him how to forage. Which include efforts like
putting things over his food (unbleached coffee filter, twigs, tied off
coffee filter ball ran through plastic link, digging treats out of soft
wood, getting treats out of wood beads, tied off dixie cups, cofee filter
attached to a measuring cup, 2 different types of foraging cages, sea
grass mat, etc etc).

So here's the problem- since he's a little professional now, the minute I
put all his foraging goodies in, he goes right to foraging and then starts
systematically hitting up every one. Within 20-30 minutes, he's done with
them all. Which is great that he's so excited about them, but now I've
gotta up the ante to try to get him to stay occupied. He does play with
toys that aren't foragers, which is good, so I don't need to play 5 or 6
hours with of foraging, but I'd like an average of 3.

So I am planning on buying him some more official foraging toys, however
they're about 20-30 bucks and I'd like to buy him several. The price is
fine, however, right now his solution to getting out treats is destroying
whatever he sees. So that would defeat the purpose if he destroyed the toy
in a day or two. So I'm going to have to teach him how to open things and
work things mechanically without destroying them. I tried giving him a
little plastic capsule that you get out of quarter machines with little
random toys in them. I put an almond in it. It took him a few days to go
for it, but finally he did. After several sepearate failed attempts at
getting to it, which involved shaking it, throwing it, etc., he finally
just ripped it apart. It was obvioussly a bit to complicated for the first
attempt. So my plan is to get another one but cut a hole under the cap so
to make it easier so that he can learn to grab hold and pull the cap off.
I am also going to go get some travel toothbrush covers to see if he can
figure out how to pop the top off of that. I am also going to get this
little slide out guy. I'm aslso going to make a few different homemade
toys that require mechanical stuff- I am planning on sticking a plastic
container cup on a kabob, put the lid on the kabob as well

As a side note, thinking about how happy he seems now with all of his toys
and stuff to do and climb and see and chew, just makes me so happy. But so
so sad that hundreds of thousands of birds like him are just sitting there
like a stuffed animal in complete and utter boredom, for their whole
lives.

Friday, February 19, 2010

Beakin' Beautiful!

 So this is Sid's beak when he first came to live with us (sorry it's fuzzy- it's with the point and shoot). It was flakey, rough, and gross because he had no opportunity to condition his beak since he had no toys, things to chew, etc:


And now that he's learning to play with toys, forage, and destory some fun stuff, check out this mug now:


Nope, we didn't dremel it or do anything to it and this photo is not retouched in any way.

Goooooo Sid! Looking handsome!!!!

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Ebay Wins=Birdy Wins!

Look what I won on Ebay today!!!!


Balsa Blocks!!
Won 12 block pieces for 9.50 plus shipping! This will last Sid several weeks after I saw them into pieces. I plan to make some foraging hanging toys and some foot toys!!!!! YES!! I'm getting like 10X the balsa wood that what I'd pay for locally at pet stores. I'm hoping to talk Gus into gnawing on some balsa wood, even though he's kinda "anti-wood"


20 Natural Vine Balls
Won these for 9.50 plus shipping! Cheaper than everywhere I found locally. I don't know that Sid will like these, but I'm almost 90 percent sure they'll be a hit if I throw an almond in there. I can tell you now Gus will want nothing to do with these and will quickly throw this off his cage with much gusto and rage.

Sid's Adventures in Foraging

*I plan on doing full features in the future with pictures, etc to help give people some ideas and what worked for us*

Well recently I started my full on efforts to teach Sid foraging. According to his previous owner, he really had never foraged. According to her, he hated all toys except his one rope toy. And he did just have a
dish of seed that he just ate from. And he chewed on his perches that were made of apple wood. That was it. Since he came to live with us, he's barely touched that rope toy, by the way, but once or twice. I've offered him a variety of toys, some not "official" toys, but he's been very receptive to new things, sometimes it just takes him a few days but he evntually figures it out. But most of the time, he'll go right to a new toy to inspect. Since he's a little piggy, I've noticed that if I can integrate food into it at first, he'll continue to play with that particular item later even if there is no more food. Here are the foragers I've tried this week.

Balsa Wood Pieces- This had been a bird kabob toy. He acted scared of them for a week or two. Then I took the pieces off of the toy, pushed some sunflower seeds and almonds into it a piece of it. It only took him a day to finally figure out to tear it up to get the seeds. He his now tearing up the wood pieces, even without the treats, with vigor, which is awesome to watch him make a glorious mess! He's now eaten all 6 pieces!  I'm in a panic to find more balsa wood quick! So I bud on some on ebay! I'm also planning to make a few bird kabobs for his cage.

Foot toy wood pieces- His own gave me a bag of toy parts that she never used. I put an almond in one of the wood pieces and he went right for it. So I've made a variety of these so that he can have a new one daily or whe never, and they're ready to go.

Plastic Chain/Coffee Filters- This one he went right for the first time I put it in. It's the first foraging toy I offered and it was a hit. I put one filter full of buttons, one of flax seeds, one of almonds. I also
switch it up and put some pellets, or whatever else I can find. I put this in a location that he had to go onto the boing. He's not been scared of the boing, as he'll go on it in a training session, but I haven't really
seen him hanging out on it. Gus loves his but it did take him a long time to get to that point.

Foraging cage- He was initially scared of this, so it's been slowly moving closer to his cage to get him used to it. I put some coffee filter balls full of pellets in it as well as some index card strips. It took him another 3 days after being in his cage for him to touch anything inside, but he likes it now.

Foraging Tray- This was semi successful. For the first round, I put in toilet paper strips, paper, string, sunflower seeds, almonds inside of finger hancuffs, sticks, and buttons. I know that he got a few almonds out
of there but everything else seemed in place, including the sunflower seeds. He's not at fan but I'll keep trying.

Paper fold up toy- I stuck pellets and sunflower seed pieces in this and it took a few days, but he ate huge chunks of this one day. yay!

Shreddable hanging toy- He's not really been interested in this one yet so I put some seeds in this one also. I'll give it a few days and watch.

Small bird nest- These were like a $1.50. He took some stuff out of it but hasn't found the stuff inside yet but he'll figure it out.

Future Plans:

I'd like to get some acrylic and plastic foraging puzzle toys because I
have a feeling he'd be good at them. But I'm stocking up on the things
that have been successful first! Then we'll move on to new things.

His previous owner gave me a huge bag of Birdie Bagels. I want to find
stuff I can stick in there. I have nutriberries but he's not liking those yet.

I am going to buy a bag of shelled nuts, drill a hole in them, and see if
he'll go for them. They're cheap enough and I think they could keep him
occupied.

I really want to invest in a dehydrator. Right now I'm using seeds and
nuts to get him to forage. But if I could get him to eat dehyrdated
veggies and fruit, that would be SO much better for the little porker.

Mash foraging- right now the only foraging opp I have for him with his
mash is the coffee filter or paper on the dish. The problem with mash is
that it's obviously wet, so you're limited in what you can use without the
item getting soaked, or moldy, or even just staying put where you insert
it. There has to be better stuff. Some ideas I have heard: put mash in a
cooked or uncooked whole grain shell (jumbo shells or manicotti or
something), wrap a lettuce or similar leaf around it and tie it, put
things on top of the mash like twigs, rocks, buttons, or beads that he'd
have to throw out to get to his mash, tiny craft flower pots hanging,
stainless steel hanging buckets, and I think that's all I can remember at
the moment.

Kabobs- I want to see if he'll eat some veggies or fruit from a kabob. I'm
going to start offering one and see what happens.

Origami- I told April to relearn some origami so that I can make some
paper foraging toys, since he loves tearing up paper and/or cardstock. I'd
like to make some hanging toys and some foot toys with this method.

Changes I've seen in Sid already-

He's been coming out of his cage in the morning and immediately starts
chewing on stuff and playing. He was previously a little devil in the
morning and it took him an hour or two to even start moving in his cage.
Now, I turn the lights on, uncover gus (not covering Sid yet), open the
cage doors, and he's out getting into stuff!

He leaves no part of his cage or above his cage unexplored throughout the
day, which is GREAT!

He seems to be getting out much more energy and seems alot less moody to
me already. He's still typical bird moody but it seems like he's quicker
to go into a sweet mode, and he seems to be stepping up more readily for
me. He's even started making a few noises for me that he usually only
makes for April!

His beak is starting to look very nice. Before it was all flaky and gross
and really needed a dremel job, bad. But now he's chewing and rubbing his
beak on stuff so it's cleaning up quite nicely!

Wednesday, February 3, 2010

A Great 24 Hours with Sid!

It's funny to watch my relationship with Sid evolve. As I might have
mentioned before, he LOVES April. The minute she walks through the door,
he's flapping, running around, talking in his little robot voice
(seriously, he sounds like a robot), he tries to get to her, and will
certainly always step up for her. Now, I've been a little jealous of this,
especially considering April does nothing with Sid. I do all the training,
the feeding, giving him treats, trying to play games, etc. She literally
gets home, picks him up for a minute or two, and that's pretty much it. I
think he wants her because she doesn't really care about him either way
(she "cares" about him, I just mean that she's not really interested in
birds or him the way that I am).

My routine on class nights (2 nights a week): I get off of work at 4, get
home around 4:20. I let them out of the cage right when I get home. If
they're in the mood, I'll do a little bit or training. Then I prep their
food, feed them, and leave for class by 5:10. Yeah, the only reason I go
home is for the birds. Now, when I open the cages, Gus comes right out and
is very excited to see me, of course. Sid takes his sweet time coming out.
Sometimes it may take him 15 minutes to come out. Which is fine, what's
the hurry, really? Then, normally when I get close to his cage, he screams
a bit at me, postures a bit, etc. I ignore this and start doing some
clicking with Gus. Even if it's just some stepping up. This immediately
shifts Sid's mood and all of the sudden he wants to play too.

Well last, night, I got home, opened the cages and he bolted out of the
cage. He then came to me for some immediate interaction! We did some step
ups and I gave him lots of treats. We did some retrieve to my hand from
the top of the cage (he usually doesn't like to do it there and just
flings the ball off the cage, but this time he walked all over the the top
of the cage to bring it back to me)! He did amazing! Then we did some more
step ups and some general body touching with c/t. Usually, I have to be
very aware and sensitive to when it seems like he might just be starting
to lose interest in training so that I can be sure to end on a good note.
Well last night, he was just so excited to train, that I couldn't detect
any sort of ensuing lost in interest. I just had to leave for class, which
is why we stopped!

Now, in the mornings, I wake up, start the coffee, and come uncover Gus
and open the cages. Gus is my morning partner in crime. He mostly snuggles
under my chin while I get ready until it's time to put my work clothes in,
in which case he sits there and makes zipper noises while I dress. I thank
him for the assistance. Anyway, I always open Sid's cage, just in case he
wants to come out. Usually he just pretends I don't exist, as I just think
he's not a "morning person." Well this morning, he came right out of the
cage. When I approached, he put his head down for petting! He even stepped
up for me once! That is unheard of for him!

What a great 24 hours!!

That being said, every time Sid takes 5 steps forward, he then takes 1
step backwards, which is ok. I just can't let the 1 step upset me to where
I lose sight of the 5 steps!