Cooking with mango
-
I bet both of those would be great sweetened with honey, but then again, I LOVE honey in just about anything! I don't like fresh papaya, not sure why. I bought a fresh one for Oreo once, and it made me gaggy as I was cutting it up, and every time I took some out of the freezer to put in his food, it made me gag again.
-
@Dashrender What a gorgeous bird!
-
I like this concept...:D
-
That is a cool bird.
-
@dominica Papaya is not great on it's own but dried or in smoothie it adds a bit of flavor and body.
-
I loved dried papaya. And it is good for the digestive system.
-
@scottalanmiller said:
I loved dried papaya. And it is good for the digestive system.
The bird in the picture, papaya's her favorite treat! My Molucaan Cockatoo could care less about it. LOL
-
@Dashrender Have you ever seen this movie?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paulie
If not, you'd love it. Older movie and one I haven't seen in years but I do very much like it.
-
@ajstringham , yep, I've seen it.. and enjoyed it.. I liked the animated movie Rio too.
-
I like @minion-queen 's variation! If it's good for you AND tastes like an Orange Julius, I'm going to have to try it!
-
@Dashrender said:
My sun conjure would love this!
Beautiful bird! I love parrots, but don't like cleaning up after them. My roommate in NY had a cockatiel named Kramer that used to poop all over the apartment.
-
@Dashrender Never saw Rio. Heard it was good though.
-
@Katie Was its first name Cosmo?
-
@Katie said:
@Dashrender said:
My sun conjure would love this!
Beautiful bird! I love parrots, but don't like cleaning up after them. My roommate in NY had a cockatiel named Kramer that used to poop all over the apartment.
You can train them pretty easily to go mainly on their cage. it's not fool proof, but 80% or more.
-
@Dashrender said:
@Katie said:
@Dashrender said:
My sun conjure would love this!
Beautiful bird! I love parrots, but don't like cleaning up after them. My roommate in NY had a cockatiel named Kramer that used to poop all over the apartment.
You can train them pretty easily to go mainly on their cage. it's not fool proof, but 80% or more.
Similar success rate to children n
-
@Dashrender What is the potty training process for birds?
-
Positive reinforcement, just like with cats.
You have to ignore then when they potty in the wrong place, ignore as in not get mad or show any emotion at all.. simply place them back on their perch...
Now, the time consuming part - you must watch them. When you see them potty on the perch you need to shower them with attention and praise. After anywhere from a few days to a few weeks they will come to understand that pottying on the perch is a good thing.. you need to praise them everytime you see them potty on the perch for the first week or two.. then drop every third or fourth praise, slowly weaning down to none, but you must do the weaning randomly - this is how you break their need/desire for praise to them pottying on the perch. Eventually they will want to go to the perch when they want to potty - and now it's up to you to be mindful of them... if they start getting ansty take them to the perch.. they probably want to potty, if they don't go after 30 seconds or so.. continue with what you were doing...
paying attention to them so I understood they needed to potty was probably the hardest part on me... I got bit more than a few times because I wanted to keep playing and they had to go! -
@Dashrender Interesting. I wonder if the same logic works with chickens. (investigating for backyard egg production purposes)
-
@Katie said:
@Dashrender Interesting. I wonder if the same logic works with chickens. (investigating for backyard egg production purposes)
The same logic will work on almost any living thing. There's a good training book called Don't Shoot the dog. The lesson above is basically the book in a nutshell and the author shows how it can be applied to nearly any animal or person.
She has a story about her mother-in-law and how she was able to get the mother-in-law to stop a questioning patterned that annoyed the author.
People don't like to think of their children as pets - but if parents learned how to train an animal, they'd have an infinitely easier time training their children to act the way the parents want.