Food Bowl Etiquette
The Foot Strainer
Place one foot on the side of the food bowl, using the other  foot as a utensil. Grab a footfull of food and lift. Smaller  seeds and pieces of food will fall to the floor, making a  funny noise. Eat the one or two pieces which remain in the  foot. Repeat until the bowl is empty.

The Dainty Selector
Approach the fresh dish of food. Daintily select pieces of  food and gently drop to the floor of the cage until only a  few desired pieces of food remain in the bowl. Proceed to  eat. When done, call for more food.

The Dieter
One at a time, hold each piece of fruit, veggie or pasta in  the foot. Take one bite and drop the remainder on the floor.  This ensures that there will be room for treats and other  delicacies later.

The Dried Fruit Gourmet
Choose pieces of dried fruit. Carefully place them in the  water bowl. Return later, after they have plumped up. Then  remove from the bowl, taste and drop on the floor.

The Shoveler
Approach a full dish of food. Bury the beak in the bowl and  with a quick snap of the neck, sweep the food sideways out  of the dish. Use short quick strokes to cover most of the  cage bottom with pretty patterns of food. If feeling  energetic, shovel harder to decorate the walls and floor  outside of the cage. This method helps convince the pet  owner that a different kind of food is preferred.

The 20 foot Fling
Dip the foot in a food dish and grab a large footfull of  goodies. Close the foot into a ball around the items, raise  the foot and throw as far as possible. This technique not  only gets to the walls and floors, but reaches much of the  furniture as well.

The Grate Houdini
From time to time drop morsels of favorite foods on the cage  floor. Let them remain there while they age to the proper  potency. When ready, climb down to the cage floor and sample  the delicacies. Many pet owners have placed grates in the  bottom of the cage. To thwart this maneuver, just stretch a  leg through the grate to get at the prize. Most birds have  legs long enough to reach the tray below the grate. If the  owner changes the cage papers daily, begin dropping pieces  of food just after the change so that the food has at least  a few hours to ripen.

The Butter or Sauce Scraper
This maneuver is to foil the human who coats a piece of  undesirable food with butter, sauce or something else that  birds really love. Just hold the piece of food in the foot  and use the beak to skim off the good tasting part, leaving  the unwanted portion untouched.

Pack a Lunch
Tuck seeds, pellets or other choice items among the feathers  and under the wings. It messes up the human's measurements  of how much is eaten and puzzles them when they give you a  shower.

Water Sports
The Artist
For birds with an artistic flair and a good sense of color.  Break off a piece of dyed wood from a favorite toy and place  in the water dish. From time to time, return to the dish and  mix. When the water has turned a satisfactory color, call  for the pet owner to admire the creation and replace the  water. Begin a new artistic work.

The Dunker
Carefully select a choice piece of food from the food dish.  Items like pellets, cheerios or birdie bread are best. Dip  in the water bowl until thoroughly soaked. Sample the moist  delicacy and decide that it doesn't taste as good as  expected. Leave the item in the water bowl and start  complaining about the messy water.

The Water Bottle Trick
For those birds lucky enough to have a water bottle. Select  the proper size seed and wedge it into the water bottle tip.  This keeps the water bottle mechanism open and creates a  nice waterfall effect. Experienced birds can also use the  beak or a toe to achieve the same effect.

Eating at the Dinner Table
The Plate Stomp
Explore the various foods available on the table, before  making a selection. Just approach each bowl or plate and  walk through it, making sure to pass through each item on  the plate. Foods with sauces and dressings are especially  great. They stick to the feet and allow the flavors to mix  with other food items. The messy feet also discourage the  pet owner from picking a bird up from the table.

The Shoulder Trick
Select a piece of food which has a sauce (such as pasta) or  a juicy item (such as a piece of tomato). Holding the food  in the beak, as fast as possible climb up the arm of a human  to the shoulder. Proceed to eat the messy food, dropping  sauce or juice on the human's clothes. When done, drop the  remainder and wipe the beak on a still clean portion of the  item of clothing. A true expert bird can perfect the  'Squeegee Trick'. Hold a piece of pasta with sauce in the  foot and bite off the end. Pull the pasta through the foot  to get another bit, while at the same time forcing the sauce  to come off on the foot. Place this foot on the human's  shoulder when it has become sufficiently covered with sauce.  Climb down the arm to get another piece of food.

The Floor Caper
After selecting items from a dinner plate, take a few bites  and fling the remainder to the floor. To throw the food  further, fling the food from a human's shoulder. If the  human becomes annoyed, placate it by offering it a bit of  the food or saying something cute and looking innocent.

Eat to Get a Hug
Grab all the garlic you can find - garlic bread, salad  dressing, etc. Then give the human a kiss. The human will  give you hugs and scratches - anything to avoid getting  another odorous, garlic breathe kiss. Also effective is the  'Pepper Kiss'. A kiss after eating hot red peppers or  jalapenos will definitely get a human's attention. 

Author Unknown
We have enslaved the rest of the animal creation, and have treated our distant cousins in fur and feathers so badly that beyond doubt, if they were able to formulate a religion, they would depict the Devil in human form.  ~William Ralph Inge, Outspoken Essays, 1922
You can only tell the gender of a Macaw through an operation. They lack exterior genetials.
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