![]() |
OT - You had to be here....
I've recovered enough to type this, I think, and the noise has died down
a little, but they're still pretty spooked..... I have two parrots, a Yellow Nape Amazon named "Zeke" and a Blue and Gold Macaw I raised from a 6-day-old chick named "Roger-Roger" (he picked the name up listening to the 2-meter ham repeater long ago). They're both pretty vocal during periods of light, squawking at the squirrels climbing down the oak tree next to their window, etc., warning of the "squirrel invasion" that happens every morning, right after I put out the old food out of their cages for the wild animals in the neighborhood who love it. It's a beautiful day in Charleston, a beautiful week. Global Warming? It's 73 on the river at 4PM and I've had the place opened up since I got home at noon. It's going to be 77F Wednesday! Global Warming? BRING IT ON!... So, I'm sitting here sipping a Boddington's minding my own business and this little sparrow hops up from the steps to the door sill and looks inside. I froze to see what he would do if left to his own curiosity. He hopped inside and started hopping around me. The sounds of his little claws clicking on the tile were the only sounds outside the fans in the computers. He must have smelled BIRD SEED coming from the parrot room so off he FLEW through the house to located it. The very instant he flew into the parrot room, all hell broke loose! The Macaw has the capability of sounding like one of those public warning horns at a Nuclear Power Plant, if he's a mind to. The warning horn must have been heard for blocks! It was deafening! The Yellow Nape was making this awful growling sound like a lion startled mixed in with his own warning calls to the Amazon flock. If a bomb went off I wouldn't have heard it. Of course, this terrified the poor little sparrow into flight, its best defense, but he/she was too terrified to remember where he/she came in so the sparrow made it worse by flying around the parrot room a few laps before ducking out the door into the computer room and spying the open door with the sun pouring in....making a very hasty exit. The parrot alarms are self-resetting, but only after the adrenaline rush is over. I was laughing so hard my stomach has a cramp. The warning horns eventually died down into several run throughs of their entire English vocabulary of funny words and phrases mixed with learned cursing I've caused over the years when my "noise limit" has been exceeded trying to shut them up. They're still talking to each other and the Macaw keeps saying, "Way, Way Too Much NOISE!", over and over. Zeke keeps repeating "NOW WHAT?!" in a loud voice. They are no longer bored and falling asleep on one foot for their afternoon nap.....There won't be any nap today....(c;] ...................you had to be here........(c;] |
OT - You had to be here....
"Larry" wrote in message
... I've recovered enough to type this, I think, and the noise has died down a little, but they're still pretty spooked..... I have two parrots, a Yellow Nape Amazon named "Zeke" and a Blue and Gold Macaw I raised from a 6-day-old chick named "Roger-Roger" (he picked the name up listening to the 2-meter ham repeater long ago). They're both pretty vocal during periods of light, squawking at the squirrels climbing down the oak tree next to their window, etc., warning of the "squirrel invasion" that happens every morning, right after I put out the old food out of their cages for the wild animals in the neighborhood who love it. It's a beautiful day in Charleston, a beautiful week. Global Warming? It's 73 on the river at 4PM and I've had the place opened up since I got home at noon. It's going to be 77F Wednesday! Global Warming? BRING IT ON!... So, I'm sitting here sipping a Boddington's minding my own business and this little sparrow hops up from the steps to the door sill and looks inside. I froze to see what he would do if left to his own curiosity. He hopped inside and started hopping around me. The sounds of his little claws clicking on the tile were the only sounds outside the fans in the computers. He must have smelled BIRD SEED coming from the parrot room so off he FLEW through the house to located it. The very instant he flew into the parrot room, all hell broke loose! The Macaw has the capability of sounding like one of those public warning horns at a Nuclear Power Plant, if he's a mind to. The warning horn must have been heard for blocks! It was deafening! The Yellow Nape was making this awful growling sound like a lion startled mixed in with his own warning calls to the Amazon flock. If a bomb went off I wouldn't have heard it. Of course, this terrified the poor little sparrow into flight, its best defense, but he/she was too terrified to remember where he/she came in so the sparrow made it worse by flying around the parrot room a few laps before ducking out the door into the computer room and spying the open door with the sun pouring in....making a very hasty exit. The parrot alarms are self-resetting, but only after the adrenaline rush is over. I was laughing so hard my stomach has a cramp. The warning horns eventually died down into several run throughs of their entire English vocabulary of funny words and phrases mixed with learned cursing I've caused over the years when my "noise limit" has been exceeded trying to shut them up. They're still talking to each other and the Macaw keeps saying, "Way, Way Too Much NOISE!", over and over. Zeke keeps repeating "NOW WHAT?!" in a loud voice. They are no longer bored and falling asleep on one foot for their afternoon nap.....There won't be any nap today....(c;] ..................you had to be here........(c;] Not sure why you marked this OT. Parrots are the only accepted bird to be kept by a pirate.... arrrrrr.... -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com |
OT - You had to be here....
It's a beautiful day in Charleston, a beautiful week. Global Warming? It's 73 on the river at 4PM and I've had the place opened up since I got home at noon. It's going to be 77F Wednesday! Global Warming? BRING IT ON!... Global warming? Let's see. 20 deg f at 7 am, 28 at 2, couple inches on the ground with more forecast for Wed. Not expected to get above freezing the rest of the week. What the F*** am I doing here? Should be in Mexico, maybe next year! Gordon in sunny Sequim |
OT - You had to be here....
"Larry" wrote in message ... I've recovered enough to type this, I think, and the noise has died down a little, but they're still pretty spooked..... I have two parrots, a Yellow Nape Amazon named "Zeke" and a Blue and Gold Macaw I raised from a 6-day-old chick named "Roger-Roger" (he picked the name up listening to the 2-meter ham repeater long ago). They're both pretty vocal during periods of light, squawking at the squirrels climbing down the oak tree next to their window, etc., warning of the "squirrel invasion" that happens every morning, right after I put out the old food out of their cages for the wild animals in the neighborhood who love it. snipped interesting story Since you are a parrot man, Larry, here is a parrot joke somebody just sent me:- My New Parrot Recently I received a parrot as a gift. The parrot had a bad attitude and an even worse vocabulary. Every word out of the bird's mouth was rude, obnoxious and laced with profanity. I tried and tried to change the bird's attitude by consistently saying only polite words, playing soft music and anything else I could think of to "clean up" the bird's vocabulary. Finally, I was fed up and I yelled at the parrot. The parrot yelled back. I shook the parrot and the parrot got angrier and even ruder. So, in desperation, I threw up my hands, grabbed the bird and put him in the freezer. For a few minutes the parrot squawked and kicked and screamed. Then suddenly there was total quiet. Not a peep was heard for over a minute. Fearing that I'd hurt the parrot, I quickly opened the door to the freezer. The parrot calmly stepped out onto my outstretched arms and said "I believe I may have offended you with my rude language and actions. I'm sincerely remorseful for my inappropriate transgressions and I fully intend to do everything I can to correct my rude and unforgivable behavior." I was stunned at the change in the bird's attitude. As I was about to ask the parrot what had made such a dramatic change in his behavior, the bird continued, "May I ask what the turkey did?" |
OT - You had to be here....
Having an African Grey and a Rainbow Lori I can appreciate.
The Lori, having lost his brother, had adopted me and attacks my wife's feet at every opportunity, drawing blood if she is not fast enough. The Grey hates me and guards my wife jealously. Since I have become more "sensitive" to his needs I rarely fall prey to his beak. But he can still screw me. I'm down in the basement the other day, the Grey is on a peach near me and my wife is at the other end of the basement. She says "Honey." The Grey says "Yes." She "Do me a favor." Grey "Sure." She "Go up and get the box in the kitchen and bring it down." Grey "OK." So I got the box. |
OT - You had to be here....
"Edgar" wrote in
: "May I ask what the turkey did?" One of my favorite phrases I've taught them to say is: "Be nice, or BE LUNCH!" Of course, that may be followed by a macaw squawk that can raise the roof, which is then followed by the same macaw screaming, "QUIET! GODDAMNED BIRD!" Living with poultry is a riot for a month or two until you're saturated with it....then, it's as if the 3 year old with PMS never grows up...for the rest of your life. Macaws live about 100 years...Amazons 50-75 years. I'm stuck with them. Luckily, parrots have an ON-OFF switch! I'll let it go on a while and when my BP rises to an unacceptable level, I simply throw a very dark blue old blanket over their cages. Total silence is about 3 minutes away as they settle in for a nice nap IN THE DARK! DARK is our FRIEND! As soon as the sun sets and the light goes out in the parrot room, you're in silence until Oh-Dark-30 when sunlight returns....IF YOU FORGET THE BLANKETS! It's about sanity. I used to keep fish but the damned things always died while I was trying to teach them how to talk..... They also don't perch well.... |
OT - You had to be here....
hpeer wrote in news:4946c4c0$0$5519
: She says "Honey." The Grey says "Yes." She "Do me a favor." Grey "Sure." She "Go up and get the box in the kitchen and bring it down." Grey "OK." So I got the box. We had gone out shopping or something back when we were married. My Yellow Nape, Zeke, was located quite close to the main door, easily in talking range. My sister-in-law came over and was too stupid to notice one of our cars was gone. She rang the bell, and the Nape said, "Hello?" She rang the bell again and got, "Hello? Hello?" Still standing outside she pounds on the door and said, "Hello, Hello! Now open the damned door!".....before realizing who was saying "Hello" to her....(c;] (No, she's not blonde.) My Nape also loves ANY electronic sound, the more complex the better. I raised my wife's daughter since she was six. When she was a teenager, responsive to Pavlov's dog effect, she'd hear the telephone ringing, perfectly, including the time between rings. The fact that she was standing right NEXT to a non-ringing phone was of no clue to her poor, blonde, 14-year-old brain. Totally under Pavlovian response, she'd grab the nearest phone, even one that never rang, to answer the calls. Then, instead of taking responsibility for her mistake, she'd get ****ed at Zeke for his ringing. Zeke never tired of watching her phone-answering reaction to his incessant "calls"..... Parrots never forget. Zeke still says several phrases my exwife taught him in the early 1980's. She's never set foot in the house since 1992. I bet he'd remember her instantly.... As to attacks, we had a Sun Conure aptly named "Screech". NO MORE CONURES, EVER! Screech was her bird and would live in her long black hair if you'd let him. Any time he was on her shoulder, you reached out your hand towards her AT YOUR OWN RISK of being viciously attacked. Once she was out of sight, Screech would sit on my shoulder for hours, pooping on my shirt and picking at my hair/ears/shirt collar with no aggressive behaviour at all. But you want him OFF YOU before you let her COME INTO VIEW! Queer Conures, damn! (Zeke has wheedled his way onto me this evening and has been crawling around inside and outside my shirt, going through all the pocket lint, for a while before assuming his favorite position laying upside down between my legs on his back with feet sticking straight up, pressing hard on the bottom of my keyboard tray as I type this, wedging his body down between my legs, his head pointing under the desk into the dark. He's been there a while, I can hear him snoring disgustingly. As he falls asleep, his head falls back and hangs down. The blood pressure must be awful like that. Maybe it makes him high....??) There is no way, by the way, to "punish" a bird. They simply can't understand why you're not infatuated with any noise they make or the paper and wooden piles in their cage bottoms..... |
OT - You had to be here....
On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 21:06:28 +0000, someone posting as Larry purportedly
wrote: It's a beautiful day in Charleston, a beautiful week. Global Warming? It's 73 on the river at 4PM and I've had the place opened up since I got home at noon. It's going to be 77F Wednesday! Jesus Larry, there has to be something good about living where you do. -- shut up and run |
OT - You had to be here....
wordsmith wrote in
m: Jesus Larry, there has to be something good about living where you do. Huh? There's 3200 miles of navigable waterways, mostly totally deserted without a single Florida condo to block the view. Will that count? How about these neighbors? http://www.magnoliaplantation.com/ I can row over there.... |
OT - You had to be here....
Larry,
Ya know, I believe there are "bird people" and then there are "not bird people." You either git it or you don't. Clearly you "git it." As do I. That is the best laugh I've had in a couple of days. Thanks. |
OT - You had to be here....
hpeer wrote in news:49482755$0$5532
: Larry, Ya know, I believe there are "bird people" and then there are "not bird people." You either git it or you don't. Clearly you "git it." As do I. That is the best laugh I've had in a couple of days. Thanks. I got fed up, tonight, after a couple of hours of calling the flocks. Do you feed yours softened Zupreem Monkey Biscuits? Try it. I guarantee not a single crumb will reach the cage floor. Take a small bowl and put 2" of hot faucet water in it...no hotter than your finger can stand. (We don't need scorched crops.) Drop one Monkey Biscuit, which is as hard as concrete out of the bag, into the hot water and float them for 20 seconds, which heats and softens them. For an Amazon sized parrot, one biscuit is plenty. For macaws, give him 2. Notice how absolutely quiet it is until they have been consumed. I've never met a parrot that doesn't simply love a softened Monkey Biscuit. My macaw was raised on them as soon as I could quit injecting baby parrot slop down his gullet. Once they get used to this treat, do not become concerned at the crazy displays you'll get every time anyone picks up a bowl in their presence. Bowl = Biscuits! Great treat...real cheap and just great for them. If you travel with your parrot, don't leave parrot seed in the cages. Feed them one biscuit softened every 4-6 hours and keep the car totally clean in the process. They won't complain....and it's great food for them, though I wouldn't recommend it for a regular diet. I don't feed kibbled dog food crap to my birds. I feed a sunflower-based parrot mix from Higgins, since the ABBA seed I fed for many years kept loading the house with hatched out worms and moths. Higgins feed is less expensive and irradiated to kill all the bugs. Birds are beautiful on it....great feathers. |
OT - You had to be here....
On Wed, 17 Dec 2008 04:27:00 +0000, Larry wrote:
hpeer wrote in news:49482755$0$5532 : Larry, Ya know, I believe there are "bird people" and then there are "not bird people." You either git it or you don't. Clearly you "git it." As do I. That is the best laugh I've had in a couple of days. Thanks. I got fed up, tonight, after a couple of hours of calling the flocks. Do you feed yours softened Zupreem Monkey Biscuits? Try it. I guarantee not a single crumb will reach the cage floor. Take a small bowl and put 2" of hot faucet water in it...no hotter than your finger can stand. (We don't need scorched crops.) Drop one Monkey Biscuit, which is as hard as concrete out of the bag, into the hot water and float them for 20 seconds, which heats and softens them. For an Amazon sized parrot, one biscuit is plenty. For macaws, give him 2. Notice how absolutely quiet it is until they have been consumed. I've never met a parrot that doesn't simply love a softened Monkey Biscuit. My macaw was raised on them as soon as I could quit injecting baby parrot slop down his gullet. Once they get used to this treat, do not become concerned at the crazy displays you'll get every time anyone picks up a bowl in their presence. Bowl = Biscuits! Great treat...real cheap and just great for them. If you travel with your parrot, don't leave parrot seed in the cages. Don't know why, but I'm seeing Larry with a parrot on his shoulder, wobbling down a pier - with a pegleg. For some reason he's got white stuff staining his red shirt all down the back. Anyway, do you perch your guys up there? Do they have "accidents" on you? Curious. I never look up at pigeons a'perchin'. --Vic |
OT - You had to be here....
Vic Smith wrote in
: Don't know why, but I'm seeing Larry with a parrot on his shoulder, wobbling down a pier - with a pegleg. For some reason he's got white stuff staining his red shirt all down the back. Anyway, do you perch your guys up there? Do they have "accidents" on you? Curious. I never look up at pigeons a'perchin'. --Vic 1) - Anyone who takes an uncaged expensive parrot anywhere near a dock or the water is a complete idiot. They cannot swim and drown almost instantly. Anyone who leaves them with flight feathers is also a fool unless they live in equatorial SA where the escaped bird can survive on his own when he leaves. I'd never have a bird on a boat. That's simply crazy. It took me nearly 4 years of hard work to "potty train" Roger-Roger, my macaw. Unless you simply give him no options, he will not poop on you, the finest trick any parrot can learn. There is a parrot club here, but I don't do well in club politics so don't join clubs. A friend who is a member, invited me to come to a meeting, so I went. For the occasion, I put on my rarely-worn nice suit and took Roger-Roger with me in the car. Entering the meeting hall, there were lots of birds calling each other from their owners' shoulders, mostly covered with a drop towel to protect their clothes. Roger-Roger sat, rather calmly which was odd, on my suitcoat shoulder, minding his own business. The president of the club greeted me with his beautiful Eclectus parrot and asked about protecting my suit. "That's no problem, he's potty trained.", I said trying not to beam like a big searchlight. They couldn't stand it and pshaw'd me something awful. "It's about time he went.", I said looking at my watch. "Can I borrow that little trash can with the plastic bag in it?" They brought the can over and I perched Roger-Roger on my hand, saying, "Do you business." to him, just once. Roger looked down at the "target", leaned back and dumped his load shouting, "BOMBS AWAY!" in a VERY loud voice....right on cue. There was a round of applause from those who saw it. About 30 minutes later, he repeated the "performance" of his best trick. That became that night's topic of conversation on how to get other birds to perform similarly.... (c; I still give him a tiny chip of Hershey's chocolate for a job well done. He'll nip me if I've dared to run out or simply have forgotten him. There's two other things that really fascinate me about this large macaw. That big beak can skin a green grape so thin it's nearly transparent, making only one "incision", dropping the skin after sucking the guts out of it. It's a very delicate operation I never cease to love watching. Then, that same beak can simply slice through an offered Brazil Nut you can't crack with a hammer as if it were made of butter. We go through a lot of grapes...(c; |
OT - You had to be here....
On Wed, 17 Dec 2008 19:15:48 +0000, Larry wrote:
Vic Smith wrote in : Don't know why, but I'm seeing Larry with a parrot on his shoulder, wobbling down a pier - with a pegleg. For some reason he's got white stuff staining his red shirt all down the back. Anyway, do you perch your guys up there? Do they have "accidents" on you? Curious. I never look up at pigeons a'perchin'. --Vic 1) - Anyone who takes an uncaged expensive parrot anywhere near a dock or the water is a complete idiot. They cannot swim and drown almost instantly. Anyone who leaves them with flight feathers is also a fool unless they live in equatorial SA where the escaped bird can survive on his own when he leaves. I'd never have a bird on a boat. That's simply crazy. It took me nearly 4 years of hard work to "potty train" Roger-Roger, my macaw. Unless you simply give him no options, he will not poop on you, the finest trick any parrot can learn. There is a parrot club here, but I don't do well in club politics so don't join clubs. A friend who is a member, invited me to come to a meeting, so I went. For the occasion, I put on my rarely-worn nice suit and took Roger-Roger with me in the car. Entering the meeting hall, there were lots of birds calling each other from their owners' shoulders, mostly covered with a drop towel to protect their clothes. Roger-Roger sat, rather calmly which was odd, on my suitcoat shoulder, minding his own business. The president of the club greeted me with his beautiful Eclectus parrot and asked about protecting my suit. "That's no problem, he's potty trained.", I said trying not to beam like a big searchlight. They couldn't stand it and pshaw'd me something awful. "It's about time he went.", I said looking at my watch. "Can I borrow that little trash can with the plastic bag in it?" They brought the can over and I perched Roger-Roger on my hand, saying, "Do you business." to him, just once. Roger looked down at the "target", leaned back and dumped his load shouting, "BOMBS AWAY!" in a VERY loud voice....right on cue. There was a round of applause from those who saw it. About 30 minutes later, he repeated the "performance" of his best trick. That became that night's topic of conversation on how to get other birds to perform similarly.... (c; I still give him a tiny chip of Hershey's chocolate for a job well done. He'll nip me if I've dared to run out or simply have forgotten him. There's two other things that really fascinate me about this large macaw. That big beak can skin a green grape so thin it's nearly transparent, making only one "incision", dropping the skin after sucking the guts out of it. It's a very delicate operation I never cease to love watching. Then, that same beak can simply slice through an offered Brazil Nut you can't crack with a hammer as if it were made of butter. We go through a lot of grapes...(c; Great hearing the "bombing" was the bomb. But you've destroyed my image of pirates with parrots. How did you potty train Roger-Roger? Briefly if you wish. --Vic |
OT - You had to be here....
Vic Smith wrote in
: How did you potty train Roger-Roger? Briefly if you wish. Three words....Repetition, repetition, repetition....holding him over that can and yelling BOMBS AWAY for a long, long time....Same way you get them to do anything. |
OT - You had to be here....
On Mon, 15 Dec 2008 21:06:28 +0000, Larry wrote:
I've recovered enough to type this, I think, and the noise has died down a little, but they're still pretty spooked..... I have two parrots, a Yellow Nape Amazon named "Zeke" and a Blue and Gold Macaw I raised from a 6-day-old chick named "Roger-Roger" (he picked the name up listening to the 2-meter ham repeater long ago). They're both pretty vocal during periods of light, squawking at the squirrels climbing down the oak tree next to their window, etc., warning of the "squirrel invasion" that happens every morning, right after I put out the old food out of their cages for the wild animals in the neighborhood who love it. It's a beautiful day in Charleston, a beautiful week. Global Warming? It's 73 on the river at 4PM and I've had the place opened up since I got home at noon. It's going to be 77F Wednesday! Global Warming? BRING IT ON!... So, I'm sitting here sipping a Boddington's minding my own business and this little sparrow hops up from the steps to the door sill and looks inside. I froze to see what he would do if left to his own curiosity. He hopped inside and started hopping around me. The sounds of his little claws clicking on the tile were the only sounds outside the fans in the computers. He must have smelled BIRD SEED coming from the parrot room so off he FLEW through the house to located it. The very instant he flew into the parrot room, all hell broke loose! The Macaw has the capability of sounding like one of those public warning horns at a Nuclear Power Plant, if he's a mind to. The warning horn must have been heard for blocks! It was deafening! The Yellow Nape was making this awful growling sound like a lion startled mixed in with his own warning calls to the Amazon flock. If a bomb went off I wouldn't have heard it. Of course, this terrified the poor little sparrow into flight, its best defense, but he/she was too terrified to remember where he/she came in so the sparrow made it worse by flying around the parrot room a few laps before ducking out the door into the computer room and spying the open door with the sun pouring in....making a very hasty exit. The parrot alarms are self-resetting, but only after the adrenaline rush is over. I was laughing so hard my stomach has a cramp. The warning horns eventually died down into several run throughs of their entire English vocabulary of funny words and phrases mixed with learned cursing I've caused over the years when my "noise limit" has been exceeded trying to shut them up. They're still talking to each other and the Macaw keeps saying, "Way, Way Too Much NOISE!", over and over. Zeke keeps repeating "NOW WHAT?!" in a loud voice. They are no longer bored and falling asleep on one foot for their afternoon nap.....There won't be any nap today....(c;] ..................you had to be here........(c;] After I'd finished laughing, I called a lady friend of mine who has a Green Quaker. After I'd read your story to her, she was howling with laughter. Hers is called Quito, and one day she called him Chico by mistake, he replied "Quito" and went back to what he was doing. His normal greeting when the cover is removed is "Hello", but if she goes back into his room later he just says "What?", then if she bends down out of his immediate sight to pick something up, she hears, "What are you doing, doing, doing". It's amazing to me that they get the phrases in the correct context. Jan "If you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined" |
OT - You had to be here....
Jan wrote in
: After I'd finished laughing, I called a lady friend of mine who has a Green Quaker. After I'd read your story to her, she was howling with laughter. Hers is called Quito, and one day she called him Chico by mistake, he replied "Quito" and went back to what he was doing. His normal greeting when the cover is removed is "Hello", but if she goes back into his room later he just says "What?", then if she bends down out of his immediate sight to pick something up, she hears, "What are you doing, doing, doing". It's amazing to me that they get the phrases in the correct context. Jan "If you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined" If a stranger just walks up and stares in at Roger-Roger, my Blue and Gold Macaw, he will look them as straight in the eye as a parrot with eyes on both sides of his head can and say, quite loudly, "UH-OH! NOW WHAT??!", which usually has them eating out of his...his...scaly claws, in no time. If you get close to his water dish, he will dip and drink and say to you, "Wanna drink?!", as many times as you will stupidly fake dipping and drinking with him. If you make a little popping sound by moving your tongue against your upper lip, he will always, without fail, plaster himself against the bars in front of you and say, "Gimme Kiss!", again as long as you will stupidly assent to his demands for attention. Zeke is more adventurous than the macaw, but isn't nearly as friendly to strangers. He puffs his feathers all up to look as big as possible and struts around in that "You put that finger in here and I'll bit the whole end of it off!" offensive-looking display of red tail feathers fanned all out....like he did for the little sparrow. He doesn't really like anyone but me until he gets a lot of exposure to them. He'll defend me to the death if he thinks you're going to touch me and he's "loose". Quakers.......NOISY! another NOISY conure! Has your friend seen the flocks of Quakers that have taken over New York City? http://www.brooklynparrots.com/ |
OT - You had to be here....
On Thu, 18 Dec 2008 05:44:22 +0000, Larry wrote:
Jan wrote in : After I'd finished laughing, I called a lady friend of mine who has a Green Quaker. After I'd read your story to her, she was howling with laughter. Hers is called Quito, and one day she called him Chico by mistake, he replied "Quito" and went back to what he was doing. His normal greeting when the cover is removed is "Hello", but if she goes back into his room later he just says "What?", then if she bends down out of his immediate sight to pick something up, she hears, "What are you doing, doing, doing". It's amazing to me that they get the phrases in the correct context. Jan "If you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined" If a stranger just walks up and stares in at Roger-Roger, my Blue and Gold Macaw, he will look them as straight in the eye as a parrot with eyes on both sides of his head can and say, quite loudly, "UH-OH! NOW WHAT??!", which usually has them eating out of his...his...scaly claws, in no time. If you get close to his water dish, he will dip and drink and say to you, "Wanna drink?!", as many times as you will stupidly fake dipping and drinking with him. If you make a little popping sound by moving your tongue against your upper lip, he will always, without fail, plaster himself against the bars in front of you and say, "Gimme Kiss!", again as long as you will stupidly assent to his demands for attention. Zeke is more adventurous than the macaw, but isn't nearly as friendly to strangers. He puffs his feathers all up to look as big as possible and struts around in that "You put that finger in here and I'll bit the whole end of it off!" offensive-looking display of red tail feathers fanned all out....like he did for the little sparrow. He doesn't really like anyone but me until he gets a lot of exposure to them. He'll defend me to the death if he thinks you're going to touch me and he's "loose". Quakers.......NOISY! another NOISY conure! Has your friend seen the flocks of Quakers that have taken over New York City? http://www.brooklynparrots.com/ I don't think she knows about the Brooklyn parrots, I'll show her the page when she next comes over. She would however disagree with you about Quakers being noisy, especially hers, true if it's startled, then it lets rip, but normally it's quite quiet. She has had a vets opinion that Quakers are the "Napoleons" of the bird world, and that they are the pit-bulls of the bird world.g So far, Quito seems to be building an extensive vocabulary and using it in the correct manner, also working on being head honcho. He also gets into the kissy kissy thing. There's a book out, I can't remember the title but I believe it contains the name "Alex" about a lady who raised and trained, I believe a Quaker to pick shapes and colours, it also had a vocabulary of about 130 words. Jan "If you can't take a joke, you shouldn't have joined" |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 09:11 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com