If you show perseverance in teaching your cockatiel to talk then be assured even an older bird can learn to mimic a few words. You should prepare your cockatiel for its first talking lesson by putting the bird in an environment where it will not be distracted by other pets and noisy children. You should also turn off competing noise such as televisions and radios. You need to approach the bird with no abrupt movements and speak to it in a soft voice. Using a soft voice is important because when you start teaching your bird the first word you want it to learn you will be saying the word distinctly and louder than the voice you normally use with your cockatiel.
Normally you will want to keep the bird in a location where there is activity to keep the bird intellectually stimulated, but not overwhelmed. If you can not clear the room the bird normally stays in then moves the bird cage to a different quieter space. Give the bird a few moments to take in its quieter surroundings. Then focus the cockatiel's attention towards you.
The sex of the cockatiel has nothing to do with its ability to learn to talk. Cockatiels of both sexes learn to talk at about the same rate. Age does make a difference. Younger cockatiels will learn to speak faster than older birds. It is important to realize the bird does not understand the word it learns to speak. The cockatiel mimics words it hears by rote. You may have noticed that your cockatiel will mimic the birds it hears in the morning when it is near an open window. These sounds are the most natural sounds for your cockatiel to mimic. It is sometimes easier to teach to birds to whistle a familiar tune than teach it to speak a word in English. If you find whistling annoying then you should not encourage it. Some experts feel whistling impedes the birds desire to learn to speak.
Some bird trainers advocate training the bird on a perch outside of the cage in front of the trainers face. Others advocate training the cockatiel with the cage covered. There are merits to both methods as they both focus the cockatiel on your voice. Pick only one word to teach to bird and repeat it several times in a strong intonation. Introducing more than one word at a time will confuse your bird. The bird must understand the sound as distinct and separate from the other sounds it hears on a daily basis. This word need to stand out from all the household background noise. Ideally you should work with your bird for at least 20 minutes twice a day to teach it its first word. Once you bird associates repeating this word with positive attention from you they will repeat it again and again. Once the bird recognizes that it pleases you to repeat certain sounds the next word you teach you bird will be repeated much sooner.
It normally takes several weeks for even a young eager cockatiel to learn to repeat words. The bird's name is often a good first word, Avoid teaching your bird swear words. It may be funny at first but unless you want that word repeated in front of house guests you will regret teaching your bird to swear. Sometimes cockatiel will repeat swear word because that are usually distinct words from the one's they usually hear and are normally say=id by a person with great gusto.
Patience and perseverance are really the only really proven ingredients to get you cockatiel to talk. I have heard people who have not taught their birds to talk that they often will mimic common sounds like the vacuum or the yelping of a small dog. Some of the sounds cockatiels make are a hissing noise when they feel threatened. My two cockatiels whistle the Andy of Mayberry song and make money sounds when they see the dog. I have no idea where the monkey sounds came from. They also do a kissing noise when you ask them for a kiss. We are working on them saying the phrase ", cats are stupid." So far the male bird Captain Morgan say's "cats" and Marie the female just swings and sings and makes kiss noises when you repeat "cats". It is fairly evident to me that the process of learning to talk varies a great deal from bird to bird.
http://pets.morewrite.com/2008/10/16/teaching-the-cockatiel-to-talk/
Published by Rebecca Furtado
I live in a small city in the midwest. I am the pet parent to four cats, two birds , and one lonely dust bunny dog named Nigel. I have two human children. They are both teenagers and I occasionally see them. View profile
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