Re: Desperate for conure help
Well, the thing is that the bird feels his relationship with you threatened by the baby. I am sure you did not mean to but, most likely, you are not paying that much attention to him any longer and devoting most of your time and cooing to the baby, instead. The bird must regard you as his mate and is enraged that you have betrayed him. Almost all psittacine species are strictly monogamous and mate for life and a bonded mate abandoning his/her mate in favor of another is unheard of and against nature, as far as they are concerned so he is retaliating and with good reason (from his point of view). Keep the baby out of his sight for now and re-establish your relationship with him as close to what it used to be as possible. Most likely your routine has changed and he is missing that as well as his time with you. Don't force him to come to you, start from scratch and just talk, sing, offer treats, etc to him. But keep him in your sights because he might try the
'fly-and-bite' again and, if you see him making a beeline for you, duck and get out of the room asap! It won't happen overnight and it will take work as well as time but you can get your bird back if you are patient, persistent and consistent in your interaction with him.
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