I thought you might enjoy playing this video with your birds. You can hear all the chatter in the room and all the talking from Ozzy, the African Grey. This is what Kenny does to occupy his time while he is caged during the day. Enjoy!
@@freshasadaisy4782 dude really that was rude and disrespectful of you to say something that disrespectful and heartless you must not have anything to do at all
Thanks for this. I’m trying to get my Senegal to come out of his shell. He is interested in Senegal sounds. They are hard to find online. He knows his own kind. Kenny is awesome. Keep posting please.
The female African gray parrot can talk? there are people who have told me that females do not speak, I have a 4-month-old female and does not speak at all. How old do they start talking about? Excuse me, I am using the translator, I am Spanish. Your parrot is very intelligent!
Tu veux des trucs pour que ton oiseau ait envie d'aller sous la douche? Ça m'a pris environ 1 mois avant de lui donner le goût... je plaisais ma Kékine sur le comptoir de la salle de bain pendant que je me douchais à chaque jour... et un moment donné... elle est venu me rejoindre en volant jusqu'à ce que je tende le bras pour l'accueillir et tranquillement je lui ai fait découvrir le plaisir de l'eau qui coule sur ses ailes. Ma youyou n'a que 2 ans
They certainly can be loud. Don't believe the internet when you see things that say they make perfect "apartment" birds. No bird makes a perfect apartment bird. All birds can be noisy. I have used my decibel meter and stood three feet away from a Senegal here at the rescue and it registered 95dB which is extremely loud and the equivalent of a Harley Mortorcycle. So, yeah, they can be loud.
ARGH! My Ned immediately began to make his essential and annoying Sennie sounds. BUT it's what I want. I am searching for any vids that have NATIVE Senegal speech, no human-forced utterances so that my boy can hear his native language, instead of the colonizing defacement we humans apply to them. I want him to hear his native tongue.
You're only seeing the bottom few inches. His cage is filled with toys on the top near the perches. All our birds have cages filled with toys, but the bottoms are covered with paper so they can play on the bottom with the balsa wood blocks and not fall through the grates.