Beautiful, thank you! My bird female is 10 outside, she keeps being in the area and is stillhealthy, saw her yesterday flying but its hard as crows around my block keep hunting her and she doesnt come. This video is helpfull to see where they go and whatthey do and how it looks when they are out.
@ParrotVolancy5 ай бұрын
I'm so sorry I missed your comment. I wasn't logged in to KZbin for a while.
@Julianna62 жыл бұрын
This is actually super funny, but whenever I want to listen to some good motivating music, I always listen to this video loll. Someimes it makes it hard to concentrate when I have your tiels on my screen flying around, but that kind of distraction is always welcome xd
@ParrotVolancy2 жыл бұрын
That's so sweet, haha. I find that songs I really like that I've used in my videos play through my head all the time. :x
@Yakito6663 жыл бұрын
Amazing. I wish I could do that with my birds.
@ParrotVolancy3 жыл бұрын
It's a lot of work, but it's something I love to do. We had a rough time trying to free-fly last year, then the winter hit, so we have a lot of brushing up to do, mainly on outdoor desensitisation/confidence, before we get back out there. Hoping to free-fly again maybe later this month if all goes well.
@tomaszgarbino27744 жыл бұрын
Wow, I've never imagined that tiels could navigate so skillfully between tight branches. At least not by looking at their natural habitat - it only goes to show how adaptable they are. Sending much love to y'all. The video also got me thinkin' : have your cockatiels ever got spooked by the geese taking off? Edit: I also visited your website just to check it out, and I so hope more people in the anglophone countries would see it. Throgh perusing of various social media and KZbin I have noticed that wing-clipping is practiced way more often in the USA then where I live (Poland) - which isn't of course to say that it's unheard of here (sadly).
@ParrotVolancy4 жыл бұрын
Haha, their flight style is definitely more suited to open space, but if there's good visibility (like when the trees are bare) and/or the trees are decently spaced, they handle it just fine. They're nowhere near on the tree-weaving level of the conures, though. :P My cockatiels have never been spooked by geese. Usually when they spook it's due to a bird of prey or something that I cannot see/hear. In the latter case, I usually assume it was a bird of prey because I have seen one in the area either before or after the spook. Thank you so much for the compliment on my website! I definitely try to share it whenever I can. Clipping is far more common here than it is in Europe. D;