In our everyday life we grow in what we do, our thoughts become different and our actions are being considered more as we get older. When I was younger I used to do a lot more reckless things what I wouldn’t do today. Opinions have changed due to experiences and so does your character. Your acceptance and maybe your curiosity goes to another point in your life where you wonder about different subjects as you used to wonder about. I’m nonstop asking the “Why” questions to myself and I can’t get tired of it. Some answers are easy made but some answers reflect to me with but “why can’t it be different?”. With the Job I have today I try to put this in practice on a daily base. Quite a while ago I had a talk with somebody from another Zoo who asked me, Does Kolmården Zoo have the highest animal training standard in Sweden? My answer was that we all do the same but we come from a different corner and that’s the difference. So, No we are not the highest standard. We just make ourselves different with the actions and techniques we take for the best care of our animals. This could maybe be an outcome of the thought “Why can’t it be different?”

At our Zoo we have quite some birds of prey, we house Harris Hawks, Falcons, Hornbills and Eagle Owls. In the High Season we have 3 shows on a daily base. We train all the birds for various behaviors such as nail & beak trims, selections and separations and box training to talk about some. I’ve been around birds for a little bit now but to be honest, birds are beautiful and all but they are just not my thing. They mysterious creatures, it might just be that I do not know anything about them what makes them hard for me to understand I guess. Within my own research I discovered that there are many different ways to train such birds, some of them I’m not familiar with. Except the way working with the Jesses. The jesses are leather straps around the legs of the birds. You can compare them with halters for horses or camels or with a dog’s leash really. Opinions might differ here. Anyway, when I break down the jesses in training theory they are used to hold the bird with you what means that you take the choice away for flying at this point. The jesses could be seen as forcing the animal to stay. Because if it wants to fly away it’s easy for the trainer to keep them to stay. The question here is right away, Is the bird thinking “ok than I will stay?” or does the bird have something like “I don’t have any choice and can’t do anything anymore I just stay?” The last one might refer to learned helplessness.
Learned Helplessness – Has been used by experimental psychologists to describe a loss of responsiveness to stimuli after prolonged exposures in which animal cannot escape an aversive stimuli or gain satisfaction in obtaining a desirable one (Overmier, 2002). “The crux of learned helplessness is that when one’s efforts at control repeatedly fail, not only does one cease trying to cause that particular outcome (helplessness), but one may also actually fail to exert control in some new situation in which control is possible.” (Fiske & Taylor, 2008). Some have considered learned helplessness as an adaptive process, but Webster (2005) suggests rather than adaptive, it is a state of psychological exhaustion; the animal has given up or is hopeless. – ABMA 2017
However we think about it from all the angles and I hear you thinking… Peter you do not understand the way cultural falconering works. Well you know what this is not the point. We are talking about the training techniques used where we could ask the question that pops up in my mind all the time “Why can’t it be different?”.
In the video you can see 3 trainers present. 2 with birds and 1 is a receiving trainer. The first thing that happens is that a birds flies to another position. The trainer didn’t ask the bird to do so and there for the bird is incorrect. The bird will discover this quickly enough because the trainer completely ignores the bird. The reaction the bird gives is flying back to its trainer. The animal is thinking on its own. In the whole training session the trainer fixes her problem right away. The challenge here is that 2 birds are present so the animals have to have double attention. Another great session by our trainers.
Evolving techniques is an important quest talking about cultures. I mean we should look more often into “Why can’t it be different” with all the respect how it has been because we learned a lot on the way. This experience had me looking different to the birds. We even get visitors asking us how are the birds not flying away? It’s fun to see how the trainers cope with the changes and how well they are doing. We are progressing pretty fast to a point where we soon can take our next steps in our training with the birds.
Why can’t it be different?
Peter Giljam
“Thinking Outside the Box”