Parrot Society of NW Ohio

Parrot Society of NW Ohio Education in creating and maintaining happy homes for parrots and people.

I just got off the phone with this man. His name is Tristan. He lost his orange-winged amazon here in Toledo, Ohio near ...
06/03/2020

I just got off the phone with this man. His name is Tristan. He lost his orange-winged amazon here in Toledo, Ohio near Secor and Central. His bird flew out the door on Friday night. Last seen on Saturday night. This bird has been in his family since 1976 and needs to come home. If you have seen this bird, heard about this bird, or know someone that may have this bird, please contact Tristan. He is desperately searching for him.

***UPDATE*** REUNITED!! Albert is home safe & sound after 16 days, 7 hours :)

Please spread the word! Albert was LOST on May 30, 2020 in Toledo, OH 43606 near Douglas Road & Kendale Drive

Description: Football-Sized, about 1 pound
Noises include telephone-like pealing,
Harsh high-pitched cawking

For more info or to contact Albert's owner, click here: https://www.pawboost.com/p/6239194

Lost or found a pet? Report it to PawBoost here: https://pbrs.io/l/rpl

In Toledo, Ohio. Owner, please report you lost bird to 911ParrotAlert.com.
05/31/2020

In Toledo, Ohio. Owner, please report you lost bird to 911ParrotAlert.com.

***UPDATE*** REUNITED!! Albert is home safe & sound after 16 days, 7 hours :)

Please spread the word! Albert was LOST on May 30, 2020 in Toledo, OH 43606 near Douglas Road & Kendale Drive

Description: Football-Sized, about 1 pound
Noises include telephone-like pealing,
Harsh high-pitched cawking

For more info or to contact Albert's owner, click here: https://www.pawboost.com/p/6239194

Lost or found a pet? Report it to PawBoost here: https://pbrs.io/l/rpl

I'm sure I'm not the only individual or animal-related organization wondering how or if a vet visit would happen during ...
04/07/2020

I'm sure I'm not the only individual or animal-related organization wondering how or if a vet visit would happen during a pandemic.

Join us this afternoon in The Parrot Project as I live-stream with Dr. Todd Driggers, DVM and owner of the Avian & Exotic Animal Clinic in Mesa, Arizona.

Join us in The Parrot Project >>> https://www.theanimalbehaviorcenter.com/memberships/the-parrot-project/

We are having people taking advantage of the time they are home and working with their animals. Our online, learning Mem...
04/04/2020

We are having people taking advantage of the time they are home and working with their animals. Our online, learning Memberships and Projects are popular and very engaging.

People binge listen to our library of growing podcasts. Our podcasts get great reviews by those in our Membership program. Level I Membership is for people with companion animals. Level II is geared toward professional animal trainers, people wanting to get into the field of better understanding applied animal behavior, BCBA's, zoo trainers, and people working with multiple species of animals.

Our Projects are species specific and most people bundle their Project of choice with a Membership of choice.

We thank you for your continued support. We also thank you for enriching your animals' minds with the power of positive reinforcement interaction. When we know better, we do better. We're all in this together.

We are having people taking advantage of the time they are home and working with their animals. Our online, learning Memberships and Projects are popular and very engaging.

People binge listen to our library of growing podcasts. Our podcasts get great reviews by those in our Membership program. Level I Membership is for people with companion animals. Level II is geared toward professional animal trainers, people wanting to get into the field of better understanding applied animal behavior, BCBA's, zoo trainers, and people working with multiple species of animals.

Our Projects are species specific and most people bundle their Project of choice with a Membership of choice.

We thank you for your continued support. We also thank you for enriching your animals' minds with the power of positive reinforcement interaction. When we know better, we do better. We're all in this together.

https://www.theanimalbehaviorcenter.com/memberships/

11/23/2019

Thursday I showed a video of me trimming Sunshine's nails. Sunshine is a bird that currently does not like to be touched. I mentioned I would post this video today. This is Koko. Same behavior, different reinforcer.

I often tell people, many times the only thing I have to use as a positive reinforcer (R+) with an animal, is food. As my work continues and I continue pairing myself with the positive, it's very common that I soon see the opportunity to be with me become one of the animal's positive reinforcers.

As of last Thursday, Koko has been with us here at the Center for three years. He was guestimated to be between 30 and 35 years old three years ago. He has lost his home at least a few times and as long as I am alive and healthy, he will live the rest of his life with me.

When I first met Koko, he was at a zoo and was labeled as 'unhandelable' and was not let out of his cage. My work with him began as soon as I met him. I began working off-contact with him. I began recall training him inside his cage. The more I worked with him, the more I fell in love with him. He was eager for the interaction and mental stimulation.

As I continued working with him, he began showing behaviors that I thought he might enjoy touch as a reinforcer. I began targeting his beak between the cage bars so I could safely open his cage and touch his head to see if a head rub could be a reinforcer. It worked and I was correct! As soon as I started rubbing his head, he would close his eyes and make a cooing noise. DRI, differential reinforcement of an incompatible behavior: he couldn't bite me if his beak was targeted between the cage bars as I opened his cage and rubbed the back of his head. If I moved too fast and he removed his beak from the cage bar target, I would withdraw my hand. He learned that from one interaction and he no longer moved his head from the cage bar target.

We moved from off-contact training to protective-contact training through the cage bars. As he continued to learn through the training, we progressed together. Most of our interaction is now free-contact training.

Koko cannot fly. His wings no longer extend fully due to arthritis. If his nails aren't trimmed, they get caught on his cage bars and he will fall. This bird makes me smile, laugh, and he now owns a huge part of my heart. He loves to be touched, kissed, preened. All highly valued reinforcers.

In this video I am dremeling his nails, and the reinforcer? No pine nut or spoon of banana baby food is as valued as this reinforcer. Thank you for helping me do better, Koko. Another bird bounced from home to home through not knowing better. Let's all do better, our animals deserve it.

11/21/2019

Sunshine is strictly protective-contact training only. He will bite skin the first chance he can get unless being trained.

Training using positive reinforcement, is the best form of communication I have found, which is one of the reinforcers behind why I continue this form of interaction.

Sunshine is thriving from the training and even calls us to his enclosure for attention and off-contact interaction. The more we train him, the more we know him. The more we know him, the better we understand him and he us.

I cannot touch Sunshine and will not touch an animal if they don't want me to. He needs his nails trimmed and if I don't trim them soon, they will begin effecting his ability to navigate his cage and perch safely. How do I trim his nails if I can't touch him? I could go in and capture him with a towel. If I do that, it is going to set our training back and he clearly shows an aversion to towels and this will all be paired with me. If I don't have to, I won't.

Here's a small clip of me working with teaching Sunshine a voluntary nail trim. I am currently training him to keep his head high while I dremel his nails. There is a lot happening in this video. The sound, the light on the dremel, the vibration of the dremel, me having to hold his nail while trimming, and keeping him keeping his foot in place.

When Sunshine now sees the dremel come out, he climbs to his station and begins begging for the nail trim to begin. His begging sounds like "Hello!"

We don't learn from easy. When we know better, we do better and Sunshine is fine tuning all of our communication skills in doing better.
You can join us now in The Parrot Project and watch, learn, and interact in our different stages of teaching a voluntary nail trim. Syringe training is next! Join us?

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Toledo, OH

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