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Thread: Barney the foul-mouthed parrot teaches other birds how to.

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    Barney the foul-mouthed parrot teaches other birds how to.

    Who's a pretty naughty boy? Barney the foul-mouthed parrot teaches other birds how to swear at tourists



    First he told the mayoress in rather forthright terms to go away.

    Then Barney the swearing parrot used more Anglo-Saxon language on a vicar and two police officers.

    But, worse still, he is now teaching his bad habits to two other birds at the wildlife sanctuary where he lives.

    "I knew that Barney could swear but what has happened is shocking," said sanctuary owner Geoff Grewcock.

    "He's been teaching the other two when we had our backs turned.

    "It sounds like a builders' yard, with all the abuse flying about."

    Barney, a seven-year-old blue and gold macaw, apparently picked up his choice vocabulary from his previous owner.

    He has duly passed it on to African Greys Sam and Charlie, both five years old, with whom he shares a cage in Mr Grewcock's living room.

    Their favourite words are f*** off, b******* and t***.

    Mr Grewcock, who owns the Warwickshire Wildlife Sanctuary in Nuneaton, said: "They just sit there swearing at each other now.

    "I wouldn't mind, but we had been careful of what we said in front of the other birds so they didn't go like Barney.

    "I didn't think they would pick it up from him. We have got another African Grey called Sunny who squawks 'shut up' at them when the swearing starts - but they don't take any notice."

    In 2005, Barney told the local mayoress to f*** off during a civic visit and then turned to two police officers and a vicar and added: "You can f*** off too, w******!"

    r Grewcock said: "We have tried everything to get Barney to curb his language and now we have got another two to contend with.

    "These birds can live until they are 70 so there are potentially another 60 years of this to contend with."

    Parrot expert Rob Harvey said the birds usually talked to get the attention of their owners. "This case is so unusual because parrots are copying another parrot," he said.

  2. #2
    magdalena is offline Blessed by Birds
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    That is hilarious but that parrot expert is an idiot if he thinks birds don't pick up things from and mimic other birds. Why do they have a macaw in a cage with 2 african greys and why are they rewarding the swearing with attention by telling the birds to shut up (as one would think if the other african grey is saying it). Still I'd send mine there for some swearing lessons, they are too nice, I'm clearly not saying shut up for god's sake to my dog enough anymore.

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    Abby's Avatar
    Abby is offline I Live, Eat & Sleep BirdBoard
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    One of the lorikeets here assisted in the development of the quakers "language".

    Arthur and Bogey trade insults across the room on a regular basis. Going to be a nightmare when Arora picks it up and joins in with the boys.
    New sig on the way. For now here's a bug to annoy you.

  4. #4
    magdalena is offline Blessed by Birds
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    Quote Originally Posted by Abby View Post
    One of the lorikeets here assisted in the development of the quakers "language".

    Arthur and Bogey trade insults across the room on a regular basis. Going to be a nightmare when Arora picks it up and joins in with the boys.
    Clearly you need Kirri to moderate, I can't even hear my grey (though she tries her hardest it's like listening for a pin drop in the middle of a bomb raid) when my U2 goes off on his evening squackathon. :D

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    TooDusty is offline BirdBoard Junkie
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    That is really weird that the expert didn't think they'd learn anything from each other. Birds learn from repetition, not just from trying to please their keeper. Has this "expert" ever had birds? lol

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    TheHolisticNanny is offline BirdBoard Junkie
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    BAH HA HAHA HA HA HAHA HAH HAHA HA HA H HA HAH................. I'm sending Mo over there!

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