Flying training is to let the bird fly freely, but it will not escape, and it can listen to the signal of the bird trainer and fly back to its owner.
before flying training, you must go through hands-on training and food-receiving training. You can only fly training after the bird and its owner have developed a sense of trust and dependence, and at the same time, they can gradually understand some intentions of their owners. Because the bird has trusted, relied on and obeyed its master at this time, even if the bird's neck buckle and anklet are lifted and thrown into the air, the bird will fly back to its master after flying in the air; Even after the bird flies to the treetops or roofs, as long as the owner gives a familiar signal, the bird will fly back obediently.
In the process of learning hands, food and flying food, birds have initially learned to fly. In the training process of the above two movements, the bird is trained with a neck rope or anklet. After this kind of training, an invisible "hooping spell" will be formed in the bird's mind, that is, no matter where it flies, there will be an invisible rope to pull itself back to its original place. When the bird forms such a consciousness, even if the owner takes off the rope, the bird will still feel that there is a rope around its neck or feet controlling it. On the other hand, because birds have established certain feelings with their owners, they have developed a sense of dependence on their owners. Under normal circumstances, they will not escape.
In addition, it must be paid special attention to that feeding is not allowed before training. For the trained ornamental birds, it is absolutely not allowed to keep a full jar of feed all day, and only a small amount of feed is allowed in the jar, so that the birds are still in a semi-hungry state after eating the feed in the jar. At the beginning of training, you can even not feed. Every time the bird is thrown out, when it flies in the air and returns to its owner's hand, it is fed with a little feed immediately. Since the owner is harmless to it and has delicious food on his hand, there is no reason why a trained and hungry bird should not fly to its owner. In the long run, a well-trained bird will "forgive" its owner even if he has no feed occasionally.