Constant screaming

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Janus
Posts: 7
Joined: Sat Sep 11, 2010 10:12 am

Constant screaming

Post by Janus »

Hi All

We've had our IRN now for about 6 months. He's great fun and always out of his cage. Before he would scream when he was inside and wnated to come out, howver now as he's out whenever we are at home he is almost constantly screaming. It is really bad as he won't let us watch tv either.

Any advice how we can make him stop?
SkyesMom
Posts: 45
Joined: Fri Aug 06, 2010 10:45 pm

Re: Constant screaming

Post by SkyesMom »

Do you hold him a lot? Usually Skye screams when she feels the need to be carried or talked to. We run an in-home childcare, so she seems to want to scream at naptime. I will tell her to stop screaming, and if she doesn't stop screaming I put her in a time out, which is essentially putting her in the back bedroom and letting her make her way back into the living room. This usually stops the unwanted behavior since she doesn't like to be left alone, and by the time she makes her way back into the living room, she is much quieter and more apt to just sit quietly and talk to us in a quieter voice.
That's what I do. :)
Dana
jimmyjack
Posts: 198
Joined: Thu Apr 29, 2010 5:54 am
Location: australia

Re: Constant screaming

Post by jimmyjack »

ive heard that time out as suggested by skyes mom can be a useful method. if already in the cage, then covering it over for 10 mins or so.
its a hard behaviour to manage seeing as youre not around when your noisy baby is screaming. have you done much in the way of foraging? there is currently a topic calling 'foraging'. its an essential bird behaviour and activity - by removing it from their daily activities by giving them a constant source of easily accessible foods, it can lead to an increase in other behaviours, such as screaming and feather pulling (in the more extreme). what would normally take several hours in their day is reduced to minutes. im reiterating something i read, but it was put in a way that made you think "huh, thats makes alot of sense".

maybe if hes got something else to do, and is distracted with that task, he will be less inclined toward attention-seeking behaviour.

also, if the house and area is very quiet when youre not around, this can stress them out and make them more noisy, apparantly. in the wild, silence suggests a predator nearby. and no matter how friendly and tame our bundles of love are, they are still only a few generations removed from wild birds. you could download some ambient nature albums, like rainforest sounds etc to play when youre out. i got a series aptly called 'sounds of nature' which has atleast a days worth of audio across several ecosystems :lol: my girlfriend like to give me grief about it, but if it works, it works. its also an opportunity, with some very basic audio recording software, to record and loop a ten minute or so phrase with your voice that you can play when youre not around to help train with speaking.

anyway, thats about my knowledge exhausted. some food for thought...
Melika
Posts: 1920
Joined: Thu Aug 04, 2005 9:11 am
Location: Florida
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Re: Constant screaming

Post by Melika »

Food is my solution as well. Hane is usually out with the family in the evening, which also happens to be the time he eats the most. He sits on his stand and pigs out on his veggies and only makes little yummy noises.

Does he play with his toys on his own? Foraging is a great thing and something I am working on as well. My goal is for Hane to forage for almost all his food.
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I've been called 'birdbrained' before, but somehow I don't think this is what they meant. say:hah-nay
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