Take your parakeet out of the cage in a light towel (make sure he can breathe!). The cloth is so that the budgie will not associate your hand with being frightened. It also keeps you from being bitten, an unpleasant experience. Take the bird (still being held inside the cloth) into a small room without things the bird can hide under or be crushed by (weird as it is, I went into a small bathroom with tile on the floor and walls). Take something with you that the bird really likes. All of my birds have liked millet spray. Set the bird on the floor and let him look around for a while until he seems more comfortable. Then offer him the millet. If he is comfortable enough to eat, then you can let him take a few bites and then move the millet (or whatever you are using) into your hand. Hopefully the bird will want it bad enough to follow onto your hand. Once he realizes that your hand isn't a monster, he should be comfortable with you placing your hand close to him. Of course, move slowly so he isn't startled. Something that helps with timid birds is having an already hand tamed budgie with you. If you are taming your bird soon after you bring it home, it will probably be missing the other birds that lived with him at the breeder's or wherever he came from. Seeing another bird will excite him and he will probably want to play with the other bird. If you can get the other bird to stay on your hand, then the little tyke will most likely come and join him after a little indecision. Another technique that I found helpful was to get the bird to sit on a perch, and then move the perch toward my hand. It cannot be the other way around or it will not work! If my hand is staying still and the perch is moving, my hand will suddenly look like a more secure place to sit. If the bird does not switch places of its own accord, then press your finger against the birds lower stomach BY MOVING THE PERCH FORWARDS. Do not move your hand.
By pressing here, you are knocking the bird off balance, forcing him to step up or fall off. Birds, being birds, have a paranoia of falling. They were made to fly so falling is unnatural. Not to mention it hurts. Again, having another bird around that is already tamed will also help with this. If the birds are sitting together on a perch and you move it so they are both being pressed in the same spot and the trainee sees the other bird step up, he will probably follow suit.
-Rachel-
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