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#1
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Taming BirdsAny input is greatfully appreciated. What are the best techniques for taming birds? Handfeeding with raw peanuts, spending lots of time in the loft so they get used to your presence? Also, do you recommend wearing the same clothing, so that the birds will be familiar with you? Thanks, Don. Man, this glass of wine sure tastes good!!!
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#2
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One word.
Safflower
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www.hillfamilyloft.com |
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#3
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Peanuts and more peanuts
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BIG T "A good heart is better than all the heads in the world." Edward Bulwer-Lytton "How wonderful it is that nobody need wait a single moment before starting to improve the world." Anne Frank |
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#4
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You don't need to wear the same clothes. Your birds know who you are.
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Charis If all the beasts were gone, men would die from great loneliness of spirit, for whatever happens to the beasts also happens to the man. Seattle 1736-1866 ![]() Another Life, Gone To The Birds! DO NO HARM Member, International Wildlife Rehabilitation Council |
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#5
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I start with the birds when they are young. Everyday I mess with the babies in the nest starting when I band them. I fight with them every day. Pick them up and handle them. This gets them used to me and handling. By the time they are out of the nest you can usually just pick them up. Then it is food, food, food. Hungry youngsters and treats work great. I usually have a five gallon bucket that I take into the young bird loft turn upside down and hand feed the birds. Simple conditioning to hand feeding and being held.
Randy
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www.hillfamilyloft.com |
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#6
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Thanks to all of you for the info. I never thought of safflower.
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#7
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Its so funny - my birds hate me when I walk in with a dust mask on. I guess they dont like the scraping!
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Matt
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#8
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I agree with handling and hand feeding. I feed mine sunflower as a treat and they like it. I almost forgot to tell you that you are supposed to be gentle with them while they are on your hand. I find out that holding them too tight is not something they like and they remember that and ended up not wanting to be hold. Look at the way this fancier is holding up his birds--so gentle:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=um_94j2FkzA Now, there are some birds that can't be tame. They are the aggressive type. It doesn't seems to matter whether you handle them often. They just don't want to be hold, etc. There are those that are really tame as well. Those I like very much. They sit on your shoulder, head, forearm and literally likes you a lot. They literally are not afraid of you. So in that sense it is genetics--there are those predispose to be tame/docile.
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![]() "I like to believe in people." Jonathan Kent, Smallville |
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#9
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they day they are old enough to walk and move about, I play with the babies everytime I am in the loft 24/7. That goes for hand feeding them like their parents do shaking food down there throats, feeding peanuts, and safflower as well. But the most important things is that older birds in the loft can change the way the babies will act. If you have birds that are scared of you, the babies will learn from them and be afraid as well, my older birds who are tamed and trusts me, will set good examples for the younger ones as well as newly acquired birds from other lofts.
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#10
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#11
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Hey alb23m, that's a whole new standard to aim for!
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#12
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I use Canadian peas. Also, like they said above, handle the young everyday, even if it is only for a minute. I take each one out of the nest and let it perch on my hand (Of course you will get the occasional poop, but that comes with the territory.) and talk to it.
The biggest mistake a new person (Or even an old person) can make when trying to tame older birds is getting frustrated. I have some older birds who were quite wild. I ought them from a guy who raises them for food. I started with holding seed in my hand. When they would not come to my hand, I put the seed in the feeder and stayed inside the coop. I had to back away, but they eventually went to the seed. They ate the peas first, then the milo, etc... Each day I would put the regular seed in the feeder, but hold the peas in my hand, staying close to the feeder. Eventually, one of the adult birds figured out if he was going to get the peas, he had to come to me. (I never put peas in the feeder.) Then another one would come, then another. They are still very leery about being handled, but it is a work i progress. The youngsters will come right up to me with no hesitation. I can pick them up, handle them at will. So practice patience. They will come around. |
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#13
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Not to sound mean, but I feel hunger is your best tool to use when taming birds. What I do is starve the young birds for a day. I start feeding peanuts to them in small pieces. At first, they'll have trouble eating the bits of peanuts, but slowly they'll get it. And when they have acquired the taste for peanuts, they'll always want it, even after you feed them their regular feed.
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#14
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Feed control.....that is what it requires, plain, simple, and to the point. And it does not require any special seeds. Those who hand feed have very tame birds.
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Warren & Karen SmithAs of 4/3/2009 all of my previously posted photo's were deleted by mistake, so if you read a post referring to a photo and it's not there, this is why http://smithfamilyloft.com/ |
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#15
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i hand feed them but i want them to be like the video i posted above. When you call them, so they come to you.
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