Socializing Your Bird with Other Pets and People
A Well-Socialized Bird is a Happy Bird
Birds that are comfortable with different people, environments, and even other pets tend to be more confident and less prone to behavioural issues.
Early Socialization
If you have a young bird, expose them to a variety of people, sounds, and environments early. This does not mean overwhelming them — gentle, positive exposure builds confidence.
Introducing Family Members
Have each family member offer treats and spend one-on-one time with the bird. This prevents one-person bonding, where the bird becomes aggressive toward everyone except their favourite person.
Guests
Warn guests not to approach the cage suddenly or make loud noises. Let the bird observe from a safe distance first. Some birds love meeting new people; others need time.
Other Birds
Introduce new birds gradually. Start with cages side by side in the same room. Allow visual contact for several days before any supervised out-of-cage interaction. Never leave unfamiliar birds unsupervised together.
Dogs and Cats
Never leave birds and predator animals unsupervised, even if they seem friendly. A single scratch or bite from a cat or dog can be fatal to a bird due to bacterial infections. Supervised, controlled introductions from a safe distance are possible.
Signs of Stress
If your bird shows stress (panting, wing spreading, screaming, biting), end the interaction immediately. Try again another day with a gentler approach.
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