First, stay hungry or half full.
Second, first hold the food with your fingers and hold it high, and ask myna to get up and eat the food (recommended food).
Third, second, when myna can fly and eat, then throw the food down heavily. If you pick it up with your mouth, please continue training.
Fourth, finally put it in the palm of your hand and throw food to myna to eat. You should train more.
Training birds to catch food is usually done in two steps. The first step is to train the bird to stand on the hands, shoulders or sticks of the bird trainer. When the bird trainer picks up the food in his hand, the bird will open its mouth to receive it. After this action is trained skillfully, you can carry out the second step of flying food training. The bird trainer is at a certain distance from the bird, holding the feed in his hand. When the bird watches the bird trainer take off the feed in his hand, as soon as the food is produced, it will fly to receive it. When training to catch flying food, we should increase the distance between the hand holding the feed and the bird with the proficiency of catching flying food.
When training birds to catch flying food, they should first take away the food cans in the bird cage or on the bird rack, and do not set up food cans. Every time when feeding, put the bird's favorite food in the palm of your hand and put it in front of the bird for the bird to peck. At first, birds are afraid to peck. At this time, as long as the hand holding the feed does not swing at will to catch the bird, the bird will be sure that the owner has no intention of hurting it. After a period of hesitation and wandering, the bird will finally peck at the feed on its owner's hand in a hungry state and can't resist the temptation of food. When the bird pecks a small amount of feed, it will make a fist, so that the bird can't peck more feed and is in a semi-hungry state. After repeated training, it is established that there is feed in the open palm and no feed in the fist. At the same time, birds have developed the habit of pecking in the hands of bird trainers. In this way, the bird's predation training is successful.