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05-31-2007, 11:30 AM
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#1 | | | Toos and Toes! And you know what I'm talkin about.  Both my U2 and my M2 just love toes and will go out of their way and do what they have to in order to get to them. If I'm laying on the couch, it is Rico's mission to get to my feet if he can. I always have to lay on the couch with my feet under a blanket.
Rocky, well he just sees them as a couple of sausages for him as his after dinner treat.
I had a question a while back about my concern with toweling a bird. One of the members here responded to me that she had heard that the bird does not identify you with the towel. With my experiences with Rocky, I agree with her. This sent me wondering on the toe thing too. Is it possible that our toos don't correlate our toes with us? This is the only thing I've been able to come up with so far that makes any sense. Our toes are way down there and wiggling and stuff and for the most part, when our birds, well mine I should say, when they are interacting with us, it's usually with our upper body. Could it be that they do not associate our toes, way down there at the other end of our body with us?
I would love to hear other people's responses. If anyone here has a too that does the same thing, could you tell us what kind of too it is? If you have a too and it does not do this, would you also share with us what kind of too it is? |
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05-31-2007, 03:59 PM
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#5 | | | Re: Toos and Toes! Quote:
Originally Posted by mamalovesrico Is it possible that our toos don't correlate our toes with us? This is the only thing I've been able to come up with so far that makes any sense. Our toes are way down there and wiggling and stuff and for the most part, when our birds, well mine I should say, when they are interacting with us, it's usually with our upper body. Could it be that they do not associate our toes, way down there at the other end of our body with us? | No Too experience here, Lara, but I think that's more than possible. Some behaviorists say that about hands. Specifically, they say that birds bond with our faces, not our hands, which is part of the reason fingers and hands get bitten so often. The hand is seen as either a threat or a competitor. If there's any credence to that theory (and I think there might be), why wouldn't the same thing apply to toes? |
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05-31-2007, 07:33 PM
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#6 | | | Re: Toos and Toes! Quote:
Originally Posted by Quito's Qage No Too experience here, Lara, but I think that's more than possible. Some behaviorists say that about hands. Specifically, they say that birds bond with our faces, not our hands, which is part of the reason fingers and hands get bitten so often. The hand is seen as either a threat or a competitor. If there's any credence to that theory (and I think there might be), why wouldn't the same thing apply to toes? | That definitely isn't the case with Ollie. She immediately knows the difference between my hands and anybody else's. Bf and I have tried to trick her in the past so he'd be able to touch her, but it doesn't work. |
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05-31-2007, 09:38 PM
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#9 | | | Re: Toos and Toes! Quote:
Originally Posted by Casa Amazona Abigail interacts nicely with my face and one hand at a time. The second hand brings bigggggg problems. | Kady was like that when I first got him. My right hand was fine and the left one wasn't tolerated anywhere near him. He's fine about both hands now though. |
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