#sticktraining with #Superdarryl inbetween #taekwondo #zoom classes. His reaction time is getting faster. #dsataekwondo #theseabilitiesmatter (at DSA Royal International Taekwondo Club) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_U8fLLnlKx/?igshid=2v0p88ndswgy
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#sticktraining with #Superdarryl inbetween #taekwondo #zoom classes. His reaction time is getting faster. #dsataekwondo #theseabilitiesmatter (at DSA Royal International Taekwondo Club) https://www.instagram.com/p/B_U8fLLnlKx/?igshid=2v0p88ndswgy

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Back to basics #baston #baton #sticktraining #uppingmyskills #betterthanyesterday #docepateskali #mckaystrengthtactics Reposted from @mckaystrengthtactics https://www.instagram.com/p/B8P3axZniTr/?igshid=1a1c9rthbqx0j
Stick Training Your Bird
Stick training is just like teaching the Step Up, but using a perch or dowel rather than your hand. For some birds, this may be the first kind of step-up training that you do; perhaps a bird is a little hand shy or prone to biting, but for most birds, stick training should come after hand taming.
Choose two or three different-shaped sticks or dowels, including at least one very long dowel. The idea here is that you may need to retrieve your bird from a high spot one day, and if he is stick trained, that will be a lot easier.
It is possible that your very friendly bird will take to stick training right away. Other birds may be fearful of sticks. That’s okay; you will just need to condition the bird to the presence of the sticks. Start by bringing the sticks into the room. Place them a few feet from the cage and leave them there for about a week. Then, move the sticks closer to the cage gradually, day by day, until they are right next to the cage. Once the bird seems comfortable with the sticks being nearby, move them to the top of the cage, or even inside the cage. Allow the bird to touch the sticks on his own if he chooses. Then, in a very gentle, comfortable moment, try to get your bird to stand on the stick. At this point, it shouldn’t be an issue.
Once you can get your bird to stand on the stick, use the “laddering” technique where you ask the bird to step up onto your hand, and then ask it to step onto the stick, then your hand, and so on, until it becomes like a game. Do this for a few minutes at a time a few times a day, but don’t make the exercise tedious for your bird. Once the bird is comfortable stepping up onto one type of perch or dowel, try other types with different colors and textures. Also, make sure that you don’t use a smooth dowel, a bird might be afraid to step onto a slick surface. Practice a few times a week to continue to reinforce the behavior.