You should NEVER catch wild animals as pets or buy animals that are caught form the wild (it harms the environment and is cruel to the animal). Thus the answer would have to be "hand tamed".
Of Course! I have a finch her name is chi chi i hand tamed her to sit on my hand, do you know what comes birds down it makes them not as flighty clip there wings so they can't fly away they don't even try to fly when you clip them at least chi chi didn't. Any bird can be hand tamed my friend had a humming bird hand tamed. Hope this worked for you Have a wonderful day :)
they rape other tribes for them or they bought them
It steps up willingly and trusts you. You can have it on your hand without it biting and pet the bird calmly
It's better to possess something, no matter how small, then to have nothing and only be able to see great things.
It means that have one thing for sure, for certain, is better than a maybe. A "bird in the hand" mans a bird that you have already caught, as opposed to two sitting in the bush that you MAY catch- or may not. And the actual expression is "A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush."
You should not try to catch a wild bird, by hand or otherwise. Unless you are licensed to work with and capture birds (in which case you would probably have the correct equipment) you could potentially harm the bird by mishandling it.
AnswerDo you mean how much is a mynah bird?
It means it's a win-win situation. A bird in the hand's worth two in the bush, but two in the hand is better still
If the 3 year old is friendly, than definitely go with the older bird. But if you cannot meet the bird, a hand-fed cockatial is infinitely better than one that is not. It is unlikely that a non-hand-fed bird will bond with its owner.
A bird in hand is worth two in the bush.
This is an often question that is raised. Wether its from the small 'Spix Macaw' to the great 'Blue and yellow Macaws', it entirely depends on its history of owners. If the Macaw was hand-reared, and received a lot of attention and company during its first years, it would be tamed and would not see the need to bite. Wild Macaws however, will bite if they feel they are in danger or their young is being threatened. This goes for every bird, hand-reared are obviously more tamed and will not bite regularly, wild Macaws or non-hand-reared Macaws will.
A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush.