I am also an apprentice and I have only flown two redtails, so take this for what it's worth. I found that if you want your passage redtail to hood well when you really need it (medical procedure, late catch a mile from your vehicle, etc...) then you had better hood the bird on a regular basis. Maybe it was my hood training, but when I stopped hooding my second bird for a week or two there was a noticeable difference in her willingness to accept the hood.
I know some falconers that do not hood their redtails and some of them fly great birds, but I am going to continue hooding mine.
Daniel Parker
Work hard and build your dreams, or someone will hire you to build theirs.
It’s interesting that until about ten years ago a hooded Harris here in the UK would have been quite a talking point. Very few used the hood with the parabuteo. Today, hood makers find the Harris giving them a nice steady trade.
Martin
1. Ease in transportation both in vehicle and when walking to hunting locale and returning to vehicle.
2. After transferring off a kill which allows the hawk to "re-boot" and allows the falconer to put game away.
3. A stressful situation arises suddenly and you hood the hawk thereby eliminating or at least severely reducing said stress.
4. When changing the anklets, bells etc, it is far easier to do with a perched and hooded hawk thereby eliminating casting the hawk.
5. Coping the beak is made easier with a hooded hawk.
6. Walking through doors.
7. Taking the hawk to the Vet.
These are only some of the reasons why I love to hood my hawk. I cannot think of any reason why not to hood my hawk. This is my preference.
Steve.
Steve
Oliver,
You seem to be going to extreme lengths to avoid the use of one of the most useful tools in falconry.
Since you clearly have serious animal training expertise, then why not clicker-train your hawk to the hood and be done with it.
That's even fun/rewarding (for both of you) and a lot more fun I'd venture than training any hawk to not launch from the first when it sees favoured quarry.
Regards,
Steve
I have thought about this allot. I did not hood my early birds, as I never learned how. I did ok, but then I needed to take a bird to the vet for a severed extensor tendon and do a bit of work on her subsequent to bringing her home. I vowed after that to ALWAYS hood train my birds and now I love it. You are correct, there are very few situations where a hood is an inescapable necessity but for me it has come down to the simple fact that I have hawks to hunt with them and the only reason I train them is to hunt them. If I didn't hunt I wouldn't train. Given that, the hood one remarkably good, safe and effective management tool in a multitude of situations. True you could probably train the bird to deal with most of those situations but honestly I don't want to, I want to hunt, put the bird away and hunt the next day. I don't even like keeping them over the summer. Many people find just as much enjoyment in training as they do in hunting, and for them, great, have at it. their birds are undoubtedly better trained than mine. I still suggest you make your bird to the hood, as it will make both your and their life easier. and the bottom line with passage birds is stress kills. However you choose to do it if you want to keep a passage bird for any length of time, you should really focus on keeping stress down, your bird will thank you, and live longer.
Jacob L'Etoile
Western MA
old thread, but does it make, (harm the bird or no difference) if the bird is hooded in the mews all day (8 hours) while one is away at work
Uwem
Fresh caught falcons spend most of their lives in the hood at least for the first 2 weeks. I would feel bad if I left my made falcons hooded in the mews. Why not leave her un hooded? Nervous hawk?
Michael Gregston
he picks at his gear. and actually just a nervous falconer. i tether him and worry he will end up entangled somehow in my absence. with the hood he stays out of trouble. but its been 3 weeks or so since i've had him and he fights me whenever i try to hood him that i worry he will associate me with the bad experience
Uwem
I watched the video on high level tidbitting with the aplomado falcon. That kind of training makes sense to me because I've used it a lot with my parrots. I had one bird trained so well to accept her nails getting filed that even when medical issues caused some pretty major fear based behavior problems, I could still do her nails without issue. So, my question about using that technique with a passage red tail is this: as seen on the video, would a person need to worry about associating the free hand with food? I don't like it when I need to text my hapkido instructor and say I need to miss class this week because I can't stop bleeding. Having a passage redtail bound to my free hand does not sound like a lot of fun. However, I do like that kind of training in that once you get it, it tends to pretty solid in my experience with other birds. Is there a way to do high level tid bitting without free hand association? I'm guess it would a convenient way to train the bird to accept its breast being touched to assess condition. My current bird still likes to bite, which makes that kind of handling a hassle. Would like to be able to to specifically mark and train certain behaviors without accidentally training in other behaviors like footiness toward the free hand.
Melissa
Melissa
Thanks for the response. I was thinking a hemostat, but a skewer sounds quicker. I'm just trying to think of how you'd go about setting it up so that you aren't fishing around trying to skewer a tidbit and giving the bird time to demonstrate other behaviors. I suppose you set it up before getting the hawk out so that you already have a plate of tidbits hidden behind you. Possibly with several already skewered? Or a bunch already skewered hidden in your pocket?
Melissa
actually that was the advice i was given by a more experienced falconer who suggests I hood and tether the bird in the training stage. he does the same with his. thing is the bird has taken a greater dislike to it as he has warmed to me. i wanted to know what the experience of others was where a bird is responding to training but hates being hooded n the mews.
Uwem
It sounds as though your hawk is not made to the hood and is well on the way to being hoodshy, and whilst it's quite legitimate, even advisable to keep a hawk hooded in the early stages, the hood is not a device to be used long term to avoid restlessness in the mews or whilst weathering.
There are exceptions to every rule, but it sounds to me as though you need some help in making your hawk to the hood first and foremost, as with every passing day things are likely to become more difficult.
I do apologise if I'm misunderstanding the situation, and wish you the best of luck in your efforts.
Tony.
I would second what Tony said. Find Raul Ramerize's video on high level hooding and get started right now. Bring your comfort level up with regards to tethering by using the Lyman method if you haven't already. Braided jesses, braided extender, braided leash.
Michael Gregston
Michael, do you know if Raul posted the video here?
Matt Murray
Success has a direct relationship with effort.
I found it here: http://www.americanbirdabatementservice.com/
It is under "high level tidbiting 1 and 2"
Jim Blackwell
"Mitakuye Oyasin"
I found it on an abatement site. I think it is American Abatement or google the key words. Another great way to learn proper falcon handling is to buy House of Grouse. Watch every move Steve makes, a true master in every respect.
Michael Gregston
All birds are different. I pretty much only hood my birds before I am going to fly them. Had some Coops that gave me problems, but when my birds won't let me hood them at home, they stay at home and don't fly or eat that day. I do not hood train birds, and try to only use the hood when I am going to fly them. Last year my bird would not let me pick her up with food earlier in the season, so she stayed home and did not fly those days. Within a month I could pick her up without food. I realize this isn't the same as hooding, but the concept is, if you want to fly and eat, YOU WILL LET ME PICK YOU UP AND HOOD YOU. I have a new Passage Prairie, and I will not hood her again until she is eating on the fist, however long that might be. I would not want to have sit around hooded for no reason if I was a bird. I have never hooded any birds during the moult. Main point is I only try to hood my birds when it is a beneficial or will be beneficial to them. That gives them the choice. Hooding in the field after flying is a different story. Had some friends with Gp's that would fight the hood in the field after flying. I watched them play games dodging, bating, then trying to slam the hood on the bird. Part of this conditioning is like a game, who will win, and the birds were a bit heavy, and honestly, acting like spoiled brats. All of these birds are now hooding properly with no more games, as they were given a choice. We have found a 100% effective way that may seem harsh to some, but works every time. Get into that later if needed. First and foremost, needs to be a decent fitting hood. Second, hood SHOULD only go on when it is going to be beneficial to the bird, of course there are circumstances or exceptions at times. Third, don't let them fool us, and get away with being a spoiled brat, as birds are quite intelligent. My new bird this year gave a me a few episodes in the beginning, but then nothing for over a month. Then coincidently, out in the field when she was at her heaviest weight one day, she bated from the hood. I know they say practice makes perfect, but don't know of any birds that just want a hood put on and off their head a hundred times just because. I know what works for my friends and I, is to give the bird a choice. Stand there and take the hood like a good little bird, or don't fly and eat. The birds figure it out pretty quickly. Maybe this isn't something that others like, or are in the position to do, but it seems to be effective.
Rick
I still want to start a sub group of one-eyed falconers on here.
Michael Gregston
Just curious, does having one eye means ones falcon is twice as high or half as high as you think it is?
Ray Gilbertson-Montana
You already know I can't count. To answer your question Ray...yes.
Michael Gregston
Excellent thread. I didn't ever make my PMRT to the hood, I really wish I had when it wold have been fairly easy to do so (manning). Many of those long windy walks back to the truck with a bate happy bird, plus plenty of missed opportunities due to his impatience with being stuck hunting off the fist instead of free flying as preferred.
Anthony Scott - Apprentice -"My Lord Protector's hawks do tower so well; They know their master loves to be aloft And bears his thoughts above his falcon's pitch.”
Use a light with a foot switch to control stimulus.
Also, why would the bird end up bound to your free hand from high level tidbitting? Hang on to the jesses better!!!
-Jeff"You live more for five minutes going fast on a bike like that, than other people do in all of their life." --Marco Simoncelli
I was more concerned about the bird generalizing the knowledge that food comes from the free hand, and then starting to watch for it and do a quick grab in situations that allow enough freedom. Such as seeing me reach into my pocket for a tidbit to have the bird jump up from the lure in the field and deciding to jump to the free hand. Would make for a little more of a tricky maneuver trying to get a tidbit into the gloved hand if the bird knows that first it passes to the free hand from that pocket. Or even if I reach behind my back to get a tidbit, anticipating that move and jumping for the free hand if I do a similar movement.
Possibly I'm just picking the technique apart too much being a lowly apprentice. My parrots know cheese come from the refrigerator and if I have one loose in the house, I'm likely to end up with a bird on me when I open the fridge. Don't want to reach behind my back to scratch my shoulder and have a hawk coming out of a tree thinking its going to get something yummy because that same motion often gets a treat out of that free hand. I did have a couple times last year with the current bird where I accidentally made a motion with the glove that she interpreted as being about to be called and she was coming in when I didn't anticipate it. Not really a problem, but tended to put things to a halt momentarily.
Melissa
If you are flying a redtail and this happens, in my experience it is because you over trained the bird. If you are spending a good deal of time training and keep the bird sharp you can be in for a world of hurt. If you keep the training limited to, don't fear me, come when I call, pay attention to me in the field you shouldn't have this problem. I have fed a number of redtails by hand, from head level and never had one grab at me. But I don't keep my birds hot and I don't train more than I have to to get by. If you do keep your bird hot and over train it, you won't be able to avoid it figuring out where the food is coming from.
Jacob L'Etoile
Western MA
Yeah, I'm reasonably confident my last bird was over trained which didn't help much of anything. She was never aggressive to my free hand though. More so the face. Personally I'd rather be grabbed in the hand than the face any day. However, we did work through it and she eventually stopped that. However, I never let her see food in my free hand either, which is probably why she never went for it. It was suggested to me that I look into a strobe light for hood training and then I got side tract by this thread since this form of training is more familiar to me and there have been a few times I would have liked to use it as a fall back for daily handling like jess swap, breast/fatness assessment etc, but didn't know how to handle food with a raptor without accidentally training food related aggression that I'd likely regret later.
Melissa
So many of you proficient holders may already know this and think, yeah that's what we keep saying but I recently had a breakthrough in understanding how to hood train a bird and I figured I would share and see what other people thought.
The standard, old school advice for hood training a bird is to bring the hood up to the chest, then take it away, when that works bring the hood a little closer untill, incremental you can pop the hood on. This never worked for me and I couldn't figure out why. My birds would lean back, doge, bate, bite and generaly make my life hell.
My realization was the taking hood away was the reward for standing still. So now I show the hood to the bird and if the bird stands still, then I take it away. Next I bring it a little closer, wait till the bird stands still, then take it away. If the bird bates, I wait untill it regains the fist and stands still, then I take the hood away. As I progressively bring the hood closer ND closer the bird is learning the best way to deal with the pressure of the hood coming up is to stay still. Usually the first time ever the hood goes on, after after trapping, the bird dosn' doge, bate or lean back, because it has learned the best way to deal with the pressure of the hood coming up to its face is to stand still. This has worked well with the last two birds I have worked with, but that could be dumb luck.
Thoughts? Does this resonate with anyone else, or a I just grasping at straws? Thanks
Jacob L'Etoile
Western MA
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