Pfft! You know nothing of marriage. If that was the case they’d be sitting next to each other mostly in silent waiting for their Metamucil to take effect.
Kissing is dominating in humans too. Every girl I've ever kissed has wanted to dominate me or wanted me to dominate her.. funny how every time I pick one she ends up picking my pocket either way. It's hard out here for the aspiring witchy house husband.
Imagine having a really bad day at work.opening the door and these two beautiful birds are doing this...you would forget about your bad day instantly..to beautiful....I would walk around the house smiling and laughing all the time.
These Ringnecks are roughly two times bigger than lovebirds, maybe a little more. And these are both males. Unlike some parrot species, ringnecks are not monogamous. Hate to be a grumpus, but facts are facts.
@Kayak & Coastal Fishing Then you must really dislike babies and elderly people. Research shows cognitive decline starts at the age of 40, and babies are born stupid.
@Kayak & Coastal Fishing let me laugh. You really are pathetic. I'm not ashamed of being human, neither am I ashamed that I've lived a life with highs and lows. Again you are just trying to be a smartass. Why don't you come up with something better 'dear' then to put me down for stupid shit
I can’t find the words to express how much joy this brought to my heart ! Thank you for sharing your lovely talking birds ! I can feel the love ! 🥰 PEACE ☮️👍👍👍❤️❤️❤️
They copy exactly what their humans owners are doing..the routine cuddling, kissing and loving each other. The whole world should be applauding the owners👏👏👏
Based on my experience with owning a bird, they're imitating behaviors that their owners do to them and the other bird, not with another person. So the owner must come downstairs each morning and say "can we kiss?" make a kissy sound, and pet them. It's really cute. Sometimes birds do pick up on really common phrases in households not spoken to them though.
They learned what they saw so their owners are equally responsible for their such loving and cheerful behavior Im sure the couple loves each other very much and the birds grasped it like pro!
@@thalmoragent9344 What? I'm not a teen or been hiding away somewhere. I'm out there, living a life like everyone else. Of course I would not be surprised. Amazing statement.
@@Denise-ot5mo most birds can be "paper trained" and they will toilet only on paper. This makes owning them more hygienic by far! However, you need to remember this before leaving magazines that yiu are reading or important paoerwork lying around! As I found out the hard way! 😂
@@baggyobeast I don't believe so. You'll always have one that's more outgoing than the other and I think that's what we're seeing here. No different to humans in the respect that they all have different personalities, he doesn't appear to be berating or having an adverse effect on the other...
I remember when I was a kid my dad (who is an asshole) asked to see a parrot and tried to talk to the parrot outside of the cage and the bird just FLIPPED out!! The parrot gave a huge stream of cuss words “You fucker!! Get the fuck offa me!!” My dad was in shock and the pet store clerk ran to help the bird. It was hilarious!!
How darling they are! Nothing like little lovebirds. No matter where you are in your own life, it warms the heart to see such joy and love. They remind me of Taylor and Travis, lol!😊
This is adorable. They are repeating what their owner does and says to them everyday. My parrot had about 50 words, phrases, and sounds he made. One of them he learned on his own (meaning I didn't repeat it over and over to him each day). I came home from work and he said "Wanna go out?" Which is what he heard me say to the dog when I came home every day! He coughed like me and laughed like me. He would yell for my husband like me and then answer himself with: "WHAT!?"
My family lived next to Mike and Sherry while I was growing up. Their parrot used to yell "MIIIIIIKE" in a woman's voice at the tops of his lungs. My dad's name is also Mike. More than a few times, that parrot set my dad grumpily hunting for my mom to find out what she wanted.
These are Indian Ringneck parrots, found in almost every Indian locality in few numbers. But unlike China (panda) we don't claim to have a copyright on them
These animals have been incredibly loved! They know so many affectionate mannerisms that it's easy to tell their owner is as sweet and gentle as they are! Very heartwarming!
How theyre talking to eachother and giving smooches is a reflection literally of how they’re treated and loved by the humans they live with. So awesome!
This and copious other incredibly complex and intelligent living creatures (with brains, eyes, ears, digestive systems, reproductive systems, circulatory systems, communication systems, skeletal/muscular systems, etc etc..are brought to you by...evolution.........lololol...🤣😄
@@pownbnull Science is how we know things that are demonstrably true often despite being very counterintuitive. You, I hope, understand the overwhelming mutually supporting lines of evidence for our globe earth despite how our individual limited perspective and experience suggests it's flat. The same situation applies to life on earth. Despite the great difficulty determining how the very first forms of life appeared, there is no difficulty demonstrating with multiple sources of mutually confirming evidence that life has evolved and is still evolving since then. Religious literalists provide plenty of strawman arguments against it, primarily only sophisticated enough to inoculate their non biologically educated flocks against examining the issue further. Most commonly apologists are poorly educated in the relevant sciences, but adept at debate, propaganda, misrepresentation, ridicule, disguising logical fallacies, promoting incredulity, elevating faith over reason etc. I assume it's holy book literalism that smothers your interest in understanding the overwhelming evidence your apologists do their best to "protect" you from. In your case you seem to be influenced by their "irreducible complexity" attempt at diverting you into an apparent dead end. It was one of the very first objections raised and addressed by Darwin in 'Origin of the Species'. I won't go into it unbidden since all it takes for an intellectually curious and honest person is to Google the term and read until he understands how it has always been a scoffer's stumbling block. Avoid distortions of what is actually taught by relying on original, respected sources in full context on the issue.
denbecr49 Please help me with what "the multiple sources of mutually confirming evidence" is... I appreciate your use of many words for this confirms to me your obvious superior intellect (which apparently arrived from evolution)... Since you are so adept at the understanding of all forms of life and its source(s) maybe you can help all of us with how exactly these aforementioned systems came about..We'll start with some of these simpler ones...the human nervous system and the endocrine system... after your help in fully explaining how evolutions role was in these, then we can start with the next systems.. in human and animal as well as ecosystems and further on....will be waiting for your educated reply...thanks...😊
Conversation translation: 0:07 Mmmuah kiss 0:09 “Good morning” (in unison) 0:11 “Love you” 0:12 Mmmuah kiss 0:13 “Good morning”, again 0:15 “Thank you” 0:19 more kissing 0:22 “Love you” (in unison) 0:24 (looks at camera) “What?” 0:26 “What you doin’?” 0:31 (again) “What you doin’?” 0:35 (other bird asks) “What you doin’?” 0:36-0:41 private convo 0:42 “What?” (looking directly at camera...like privacy please).😄 More private convo, kissing, & love! They’ve been listening to & watching a couple in Love!!!
Note the blue ones neck feathers in combination with the eyes. It feels threatened. Note the green ones eyes as it 'lovingly kissed' the blue one.. green one claimed alpha status basically. Oh and they both male. You can tell by the neck rings.
@Jean Sanchez Well then how about "child"? Why is it so important to call your child for goatoffspring? Are you a goat? Did you picturesearch BAPHOMET?
@Jean Sanchez Oh it's more of a loving/joking thing, and they wouldn't use it while talking to others about their kids. I've personally seen it a few times. Maybe it's a Michigan thing.
Such a lovely parrot couple🦜🦜, kissing ❤❤❤, talking, the cutest thing I've ever seen, they are clearly very much loved family members, wonderfully lovely 😘💖💞🩷❤❤❤
@@rickdeckard1075 Wrong, wrong and wrong. This is affection. Being preened and mimicking is not dominance behavior, it's the exact opposite. Parrots do NOT let other parrots preen them unless there is full trust.
@@Trylica we don't know their history. A lot of parrots these days are intentionally bred in captivity to continue their species, and some don't survive in the wild because their bright colors attract predators.
How cute was that! We used to have an African Grey. He had a little tv and would come up with all new things to say to us. I miss him so much. Thank you for sharing such a heartwarming vid! 🥰
They mimic what they hear in their surroundings. It's a defense against predators. The sound of a pissed off Jaguar is sure to scare off an Ocelot. What amazed me is they both were mimicking a conversation between two people. It's one thing for a single bird to repeat words and sentences the it heard. For two to birds to mimic a conversation, both of them have to know what to say, when to say it, and when to keep quiet. Same thing with the physical interactions. I had no idea that parrots were capable of that. They're more intelligent than I thought..
Not a good idea, they shouldn’t mimic humans. They, animals, have been around longer than us. In fact, Charles tells us, we are their descendants. Now, if you really insists, let’s limit the mimesis to just talking and nothing more. We, humans, are masters of BSing our way through talking. As long as these birds are limited to mimicking that insatiable rituals of ours, and not mimicking our mastery of destruction, everything should be alright then.
@@ia1530 I don't think we need to worry about parrots developing the ability to rape and pillage from us humans anytime soon. They use this ability in the wild to scare off predators. They mimic the vocalizations of larger predators. They don't adopt the same thoughts and motives behind the sounds they mimic. Jesus.