tielfan wrote:
If you want to improve your training skills, working with Tiko would be a good experience. You'd have to watch her body language and go slow enough that you don't startle her into having an accident. And you'd also have to watch her body language and interact with her in a way that gets the results you want without you getting bitten.
It would definitely be a challenge, but this is the type of skill that all the professional-quality trainers have. I talked to a macaw trainer once who said she preferred working with mean nasty birds, because they always ended up being the best performers. She skillfully used positive reinforcement to transform that aggressive energy into behavior that was fun for the bird and for everyone watching it.
I made two threads

i am working with her but the problem is how can I get her off the cage without making her fly off the cage and end up being scared.