T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1182.25 | HELP WITH 'PIGEONS' | USDEV1::PLINCOURT | | Thu May 16 1991 14:16 | 20 |
|
I've posted a similar note to the ASKENET notesfile and someone
suggested I post it in here as well...
I'm hoping I can get a solution to this real soon!
=======================================================================
My problem has to do with those nasty, messy birds that we all (?)
dislike....PIGEONS!!! Well it seems that for the past 2 months
they have choosen my balcony as their 'mating grounds'. I have
had a total of 7 eggs laid on my balcony and tons of...well you
know :)
I don't know if anyone out there has had to deal with sort of thing,
but it they have I'm sure you have sympathy for me.
How about a solution for me as well???
|
1182.26 | Icky stuff | CIMNET::MOCCIA | | Fri May 17 1991 10:07 | 7 |
| There is anti-pigeon stuff generally available. One I know of,
called Tanglefoot, is a rubbery goop placed on perching locations,
like a balcony rail. The other environmentally approved solution
is, of course, to adopt or befriend a neighborhood cat.
PBM
|
1182.27 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri May 17 1991 11:08 | 6 |
| I've seen spiky wire things on ledges where pigeons congregate, but it
doesn't seem to work. One place where they've tried this is a mall near
ZKO -- the one that has Highland in it.
The molded plastic owls only seem to work if they include the element
of change -- if they're stationary, the pigeons get used to them.
|
1182.28 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Fri May 17 1991 13:02 | 5 |
| Re: .2
So I guess the pigeons figure out that "the owls are not what they seem"?
Steve
|
1182.29 | Pigeons don't like snakes | GLORY::MRCGGX::CHAPMAN | Jim Chapman DTN 456-5593 | Fri May 17 1991 14:43 | 5 |
|
Another anti-pigeon item is a rubber snake. Natual enemies and all that.
This works unless you live in Hawaii.
Jim
|
1182.30 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri May 17 1991 15:18 | 4 |
| Rubber snakes are natural enemies of pigeons? In Hawaii, they're natural
friends? But seriously, I imagine that rubber snakes lose their effectiveness
as the pigeons realize that they never move. Pigeons are pretty stupid,
but not *that* stupid.
|
1182.31 | | KAINVC::PAULKM::WEISS | Trade freedom for security-lose both | Fri May 17 1991 16:49 | 4 |
| I don't think there ARE any snakes in Hawaii, so the birds have no idea what it
is.
Paul
|
1182.32 | As per Tom Lehrer :-) | MVDS00::LOCKRIDGE | Artificial Insanity | Mon May 20 1991 12:27 | 6 |
| As per Tom Lehrer from "Poisoning Pigeons in the Park", "But it not
against any religion, to want to dispose of a pigeon. . ."
so go for it! :-)
-Bob
|
1182.33 | | OAW::MILLER | James' and ??? Daddy� | Mon May 20 1991 17:22 | 14 |
| My neighbor and I have the perfect solution.
BB guns.
If you miss, they fly away and don't come back for a while.
If you hit them, the either die on the spot, or NEVER COME BACK if they
live.
This may not be practical if you live in an apartment, but for us with
out 1/2 acre of garden, it works very well.
I hope I haven't upset anyone, but the winged rats don't belong in the
garden or the flower boxes.
|
1182.34 | big, ugly snake | VERGA::THORSTENSEN | | Tue May 21 1991 08:51 | 8 |
| Most garden centers sell blow-up snakes. They're about 5' long and
look like rattlers. I use one in my garden, but move it every few days
or so - on the ground, up the fence, hiding, etc.
I feed the birds, seems like especially the pigeons, during the
winter. Every morning they wait on my neighbor's roof for me to
put out the seed. Once I move the snake into the garden, they're *gone*
until I remove it in the fall.
|
1182.35 | | SOLVIT::TOMMYB::BERKNER | Wonderful person. | Wed May 05 1993 13:08 | 26 |
| My problem isn't pidgeons, but it is birds.
Every morning for the last month or so, I am awakened in the morning by
two STUPID birds that are pecking on my windows. At first they were sitting
on the branch of a shrub and pecking at the glass. I used the simple solution
of trimming the branch so they couldn't reach the window. Now they fly at
window, hitting it with their beaks and doing very odd looking flight
maneuvers when they discover they can't get through.
They are holding seige to two different windows (on different walls) of my
library. It's a really nice room, but I don't think the birds are actually
trying to move in (my wife's comment).
I expect they are attacking some reflection they see in the window. To add
insult to injury, on mornings when I'm really tired and sleep through the
pecking, the cat comes in and wakes me to make sure that I know he is being
annoyed by them also.
Two questions; How long will this go on? and Any easy, quick way to put
a stop to it?
I will not get upset by the obvious answers that I have invited with this
problem so go ahead and enter them - a laugh may help on some of these tired
days.
Tom
|
1182.36 | hawks | PACKED::PIC9::allen | Christopher Allen, DEC COBOL, ZKO 381-0864 | Wed May 05 1993 13:49 | 5 |
| Get a hawk silhouette and stick it on your window. I'm not sure where to get
one, though, but you might try a store that sells bird-feeding supplies, or
ask at your local Audubon Society.
-Chris
|
1182.37 | one option | EARRTH::ROBERTS | too many keys. So little time | Wed May 05 1993 14:01 | 6 |
|
recently I put up a small shelf under the eves on the back of our house
to get a phoebe to stop atacking the screen poarch. It was poking holes
in the screens. There's a new nest there now and everyones happy.
Gary
|
1182.38 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Wed May 05 1993 14:34 | 7 |
| My first reaction was "get earplugs," but then I got to the part about the cat.
So...
get the cat earplugs too.
|
1182.39 | | BRAT::REDZIN::DCOX | | Thu May 06 1993 10:23 | 17 |
| If the cat is really aggravated, and if the windows are openable with
screens, open the inside windows, leave the screens down. If your cat
is irked, it will jump up to the inside sill when the birds appear (or
earlier in anticipation).
We had a problem with Blue Jays sitting on a small roof just under our
bedroom window and jabbering away at 4:00 am or so. Once we left the
window open and the cat jumped up to the sill, the Jay took off. after
a few days of that, they never returned.
Of course, then the cat whined about wanting to go out at 4:00 am and
chase the birds, but that's a different problem.
Dave
|
1182.40 | 2d hawks | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu May 06 1993 14:56 | 12 |
|
Funny, I was just thinking about the hawk silhouette idea
as I was reading the beaver dam string - stretch a wire across
the pond etc. A renowned behaviourist, Konrad Lorenz used
this in his conditioning experiments. We had a similar problem
in REO site, where birds would kamikaze into the side of the glass
tunnel connecting REO1 and REO2. Maintenance stuck on some hawk
silouettes, and it stopped instantly. Agriculture and garden shops
often sell them for greenhouses.
Colin
|
1182.41 | | LUDWIG::JOERILEY | Everyone can dream... | Fri May 07 1993 03:00 | 1 |
| You could always keep a loaded 12 ga shotgun in your study. :^)
|
1182.42 | TGIF | ELWOOD::DYMON | | Fri May 07 1993 09:41 | 9 |
|
To much noise with the 12ga..... How about the note with
the cat on the door screen and the suggestion of electrifing
the screen..... Can we try that one hear?????:):)
........Cook at 120v and serve!!
|
1182.43 | Tried soaping the windows? | STAR::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri May 07 1993 19:20 | 7 |
| This problem tends to be seasonal (mating season/territory); we had the
problem a few years back with cardinals and finally dissuaded them by
soaping the outside of the window with a fairly thick soup of Ivory
Flakes (Powder? don't recall which).
Makes the windows kind of ugly for the interim, but when you finally
wash it off, they're *clean*.
|
1182.44 | | ASABET::J_TOMAO | Sixteen down, sixteen to go! | Wed Jun 08 1994 13:14 | 12 |
| Well I never thought much about getting rid of the pidgeons - I
actually enjoyed watching their family grow...on the house across the
street. Well these noise creatures who dump large clumps of turd on my
car, my windows and now the sides of my home, have decided to hang out
on my roof.
Does the fake owl work - and for how long? How about that blow up
snake? It is not easy getting to my roof (I have no ladder) so I need
something that once its there I won't have to bother with it.
Thanks,
Joyce
|
1182.45 | | PROGID::allen | Christopher Allen, DEC COBOL, ZKO 381-0864 | Wed Jun 08 1994 13:32 | 6 |
| I've heard that stringing some sort of wire or string along the peak of your
roof, standing off about 2" to 4", will keep birds (pigeons, seagulls) from
resting there. This probably won't help if the birds are resting on the sloping
part of your roof, however.
-Chris
|
1182.46 | Beautiful birds yes, pigeons NO | HYLNDR::MCFARLAND | | Wed Jun 08 1994 13:39 | 7 |
| Any suggestions on how to rid my bird feeder of the flying rats and not
scaring away all the beautiful birds?
Have tried the bbgun approach but it does not keep them away for long.
Judie
|
1182.47 | | SMAUG::MENDEL | Welcome to the next baselevel | Wed Jun 08 1994 14:01 | 9 |
| >>> flying rats
Bats?
I heard someone once say that they built a box that broadcast on
the bats' frequency. Claimed it had a very pronounced effect on
their flight patterns - they couldn't "see" any trees, or the
ground for that matter. 'Course, you now have the problem of
stunned bats all over your lawn ...
|
1182.48 | wrong note (there's a Bats in birdfeeder NOTE) :^) | INDEV1::SMITH | I need two of everything... | Wed Jun 08 1994 14:03 | 3 |
| I think the note said Rats... As in PIGEONS..
Bats in a birdfeeder... :^) never heard of that problem before :^)
|
1182.49 | Try a *live* falcon! | HDLITE::CHALTAS | What about Naomi? | Wed Jun 08 1994 14:17 | 2 |
| Fake owls do *not* work. I've seen (more than once) a whole row
of pigeons perched right next to a fake owl.
|
1182.50 | 'course the Norwegian Blue prefers kippin' on 'is back | SEND::PARODI | John H. Parodi DTN 381-1640 | Wed Jun 08 1994 14:23 | 11 |
|
Hey, pigeons gotta eat too.
One approach that recognizes this fact would be to put ultra-cheap
birdfood (e.g., cracked corn or a bargain mixture) on the ground and
save the good stuff (sunflower seeds or a premium mixture) for the
feeders. Pigeons prefer feeding on the ground (as do squirrels,
bluejays, cowbirds, grackles, redwing blackbirds...) -- I see them in
the feeders only after the ground food is gone.
JP
|
1182.51 | | NOVA::SWONGER | DBS Software Quality Engineering | Wed Jun 08 1994 15:30 | 16 |
| re: Fake owl, etc.
I used a rubber snake with good effect, for about 4-6 months. Then
they just got used to it.
re: Bird Feeder
Get a bird feeder that the pigeon's can't perch on, like the tubes
with small perches next to each opening. Lantern style feeders are
easy for them. They generally can't deal with finch feeders.
If you're really particular, use a thistle feeder. The thistle seed
is expensive, but from what I head lasts a pretty long time, because
the flying pigs can't get at it.
Roy
|
1182.52 | snakes. eeeewwwww. | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Wed Jun 08 1994 15:42 | 1 |
| I've seen a rubber snake work.
|
1182.53 | Meow, hiss!!! | STRATA::CASSIDY | | Thu Jun 09 1994 04:16 | 9 |
|
How about a cat? Not that I'm a `cat person', but they can
be useful.
Hey!!! If your roof is high enough, you can throw a cat up
there and it wont be able to get back down. Pigeon problem solved!
Relax! I was just kidding!
|
1182.54 | move them around | SMURF::WALTERS | | Thu Jun 09 1994 09:26 | 3 |
|
The fake animal scarers are more effective if you move them
every couple of weeks.
|
1182.55 | When they stop being scared, pull the string | LEDDEV::FURBECK | MEMBER: Norwegian Elkhound Fan Club | Thu Jun 09 1994 14:47 | 7 |
| For crow hunting you can use an owl decoy. Crows like to harrass slow
flying owls. Soooo, owl calls, owl decoys with movable wings and
rotating heads are made. Put the bird on the roof and pull the string
every now and again. Hoot the owl call for effects! Crow hunting is
not popular in New England but a mail order place may carry these.
A bit extreme, I know. I also have plans for owl "bird" houses...
|
1182.1 | Simple!!! | OOU812::LEIBRANDT | | Fri Feb 17 1995 15:25 | 4 |
|
How about a scarecrow!!! ;^)
/Charlie
|
1182.2 | Works for Pigeons & Seagulls | MCITS1::TEJA | | Fri Feb 17 1995 16:04 | 4 |
| In Seattle they have plastic owls on top of things (bridges, buildings, etc...)
to keep other birds away. Seems to work pretty well there.
|
1182.3 | It has to look good | AKOCOA::CSAWYER | | Fri Feb 17 1995 16:19 | 2 |
| Thanks but not exactly the "look" I am looking for. Maybe
if I could hide it in the tree.
|
1182.4 | | WLDBIL::KILGORE | Missed Woodstock -- *twice*! | Fri Feb 17 1995 16:27 | 3 |
|
Watch the first 10 minutes of the movie "Steel Magnolias".
|
1182.5 | Didn't Hitchcock do a movie about this? | ANGST::BECK | Paul Beck | Fri Feb 17 1995 16:52 | 4 |
| If you hide it in the tree, odds are the birds won't see it either.
I'd bet the only solution will be to remove the attraction (i.e.
get the restaurant to keep its trash covered).
|
1182.6 | snake in the tree branches | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Mon Feb 20 1995 08:54 | 3 |
| Try a rubber snake.
Art
|
1182.7 | aversion therapy | SMURF::WALTERS | | Mon Feb 20 1995 17:36 | 44 |
|
It depends how much effort you want to put into this.
Animal psychology stuff. The trash is a strong attractive stimulus so
you need a very strong negative stimulus to drive them off - especially
in cold weather when other food is hard to find. Animals tend to be
very nervous when feeding as this is a time of maximum risk from
predators. Make them more nervous and the feeding will stop for a
few days. Until new birds move into the area - then you'll have to
repeat the process.
A couple of options:
The owl/snake scarers are cheap and work pretty well, but the birds
tend to get familiar with (attenuate to) them unless you "randomize"
the scare - move them every few days or have a random interval between
the appearances.
Find out what species they are and obtain a recording of their alarm
call (local libraries often have sources for these). Make a tape of
this, randomizing the time interval between calls. Play the tape for
an hour or so at random times during the day (a good excercise for your
multimedia PC.) Animals don't attenuate to their own alarm calls like
they do to scarers.
Take some of your own food waste and mix it with an emetic like epsom
salts. Toss that in the garbage. (Taste aversion is very effective.)
Shoot a few and hang 'em by their feet in the tree. (Cruel maybe,
morbid yes, but very effective.)
If the pests are a locally-established social group such as rooks, and
you are persistent in your efforts, you might be able to establish
a "taboo" in the colony. This happens when one or more group members
has been scared enough that they won't approach the garbage to feed.
If they see another member of the colony approaching the garbage, they
will give an alarm call. Eventually, the whole colony becomes
sensitized to the place and feeding will stop.
regards,
Colin
|
1182.8 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Tue Feb 21 1995 10:24 | 17 |
|
A beebee gun should do the trick. No need to be caught with
real bullets and real weapon in fighting this problem in a
(probably) highly peopled area. A slingshot practice session
is probably a less put-him-in-jail approach over the beebee's.
;*)
Spread anti-freeze over the garbage...it kills mice, dogs, cats,
etc...might wipe out your birds. Might kill the homeless though.
The last message sounded like a good way of handling the problem
though.
|
1182.9 | Just an FYI | LUDWIG::BING | | Wed Feb 22 1995 07:17 | 7 |
|
re -1
In MA a BB gun is considered a real gun.
Walt
|
1182.10 | Phasers on Stun? | LIOS01::BARNES | | Thu Feb 23 1995 14:51 | 29 |
| I have seen ultra-sonic devices that are designed to keep various
creatures away. Specifically I have seen one for deer, dogs, cats,
squirrels,etc. There are others designed for rodents and similiar
animals. I believe there was also one for birds. The device gets
plugged into a standard 110V outlet and emits a sound irritating to
the target creatures, but above the hearing range of humans. It has an
effective range in the neighborhood of 100 feet and it's built for outdoor
use.
I am interested in it to keep the neighbors cat's out of my yard, the
one that my neighbors tell me never strays from their yard.
The price is $99 and I saw it in either Brookstone or the Sharper image
catalog. If it was cheaper I would have one or two by now. It's one of
those gadgets that one buys on a whim when you have a few bucks extra
in your pocket.
It doesn't break any laws, in some locales blackbirds are protected,
doesn't risk an errant projectile from striking something or someone
who is not the target and better yet it works 24 hours a day even when
you aren't there. In fact if it is carefully deployed and you tell
noone about it no-one will ever know it's there, except the birds. I don't
know of anyone who has actually used one so I can't testify to
effectiveness. It sounds like bracketing the dumpster and the tree would
do the job. Watching birds fly into the exclusion zone would seem to be
really interesting, almost like a Star Trek Enterprise Defensive Shield.
JB
|
1182.11 | recycled rose prunings | SMURF::WALTERS | | Fri Feb 24 1995 11:08 | 31 |
|
re :10
It might work, but the same rule of attenuation applies. A constant
signal will eventually be perceived as "no threat". I've seen crows
rise up and then happily resume feeding near a kilodeciBel propane
cannon because it went off too regularly.
To get the best out of this device, plug it in to a pseudorandom timer
set to a short (minutes) interval. Even better, wire it in some way that
it only goes off when the birds approach the food. (A $24 replacement
motion detector used for outdoor lighting would be ideal.)
As a sidebar to this, the Royal Air Force has experimented with many
methods of keeping birds away from RAF bases. The method they use now
is a falconry unit. The falcons are too well fed to actually chase and
kill the birds, but their mere presence on the field will clear the air
for miles around. The birds are flown at random intervals to maximize
the effect. Originally, like any military establishment, they flew the
birds according to a regular schedule (like going on patrol). The
geese and seagulls soon learned when there were "safe" periods, and
arrived to feed at those times. A few hundred million years of
evolution produces a smart animal....
Cats are creatures of habit. Watch where it goes and concentrate on
those places. There's a product that you can use to spray your yard
that animals don't like (I think it's aluminum sulphate solution).
They also don't like the prunings from rose bushes to be strewn on
their stomping grounds.
Colin
|
1182.12 | Is there a State Board of Health? | AKOCOA::CSAWYER | | Tue Mar 14 1995 08:15 | 16 |
| Well I guess owls in the trees and snakes here and there are the
easiest way to keep the birds away. I can move the owls and
snakes every few days to keep them effective. The birds do fly away
when I make a loud noise and I do that whenever I can.
I have taken pictures of the area and will be picking them up tomorrow
to send with a letter to the Westminster Board of Health. I have
complained on 3 other occasions and the restaurant cleans up "once";
then things go back to disgusting. Does anyone know if I can complain
to the State Board of Health? Westminster does not have a health
inspector at this time so I think I will get put off regarding this
complaint. With summer just around the corner I really want to be able
to enjoy my yard.
|
1182.13 | maybe a little publicity | CPDW::PALUSES | Bob Paluses @SHR | Tue Mar 14 1995 09:37 | 8 |
|
You may want to contact a local newspaper on your plight. A little
press goes a long way and any bad publicity for the owners of the
dumpster may cause them to clean up their act.
Bob
|
1182.14 | He's BAAAAAAAACK! | ASDG::SBILL | | Tue Mar 14 1995 09:49 | 14 |
|
Is there any advice for a woodpecker problem? Just found out that last
summer's woodpecker is back and he brought a mate! I keep filling the
holes and they keep starting new ones. Our exterminator recommended
Ro-Pel and I tried it last summer but it didn't seem to help much. The
first time I used it was at night. I climbed up the ladder and pointed
it at the hole and saw eyes staring back at me just as I sprayed the
hole! The woodpecker came shooting out straight at me! Direct hit at
point-blank range! I figured he'd never come back! WRONG! I guess the
stuff didn't bother him at all. I'll keep using it but I think
another strategy is in order. I'll probably try rubber snakes next.
Vinyl siding is my last resort!
Steve B.
|
1182.15 | | MRKTNG::BROCK | Son of a Beech | Thu Mar 16 1995 10:01 | 3 |
| To -1
Ummmm....why is having a woodpecker a problem?
|
1182.16 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Mar 16 1995 11:55 | 6 |
|
BECAUSE, they beat the h*ll out of one's siding!!! Large holes
all over the place!!! They like cedar siding to boot!!!
;*}
|
1182.17 | | VMSSG::PAGLIARULO | | Thu Mar 16 1995 12:50 | 6 |
| I'll admit upfront that this may be a dumb idea. What about a suet feeder to
give them something else to attack rather than your house? We have a number of
woodpeckers out back. They are always at the feeder but don't touch the house
which is cedar siding. If you can't beat 'em....
George
|
1182.18 | could be seasonal | HDLITE::CHALTAS | New & Improved! | Thu Mar 16 1995 12:59 | 4 |
| In the spring at least some kinds of woodpecker like to "drum" as
a way of establishing territory and/or attracting mates. They'll pound
on most anything that sounds good, even if it *isn't* wood -- I had
one drumming on vinyl siding!
|
1182.19 | | BIGQ::GARDNER | justme....jacqui | Thu Mar 16 1995 13:37 | 11 |
|
The lil'peckers DO have wonderful opportunities to pound away at
many, many suet feeders and many, many shell-on peanut feeders.
They are well fed in *my* yard!!! Is there anything to spred on
the siding that would distract them? I have placed a large owl
in the window next to the area.
justme....jacqui
|
1182.20 | | QUARK::LIONEL | Free advice is worth every cent | Thu Mar 16 1995 14:37 | 5 |
| The woodpeckers attack your siding because they think they hear bugs underneath.
There may actually be bugs, or something inside your house that sounds like
it (a ticking clock is typical).
Steve
|
1182.21 | Sometimes I just can't help myself! | STAR::DIPIRRO | | Thu Mar 16 1995 16:19 | 3 |
| > Ummmm....why is having a woodpecker a problem?
My guess would be all the splinters...
|
1182.22 | | NOVA::FISHER | now |a|n|a|l|o|g| | Fri Mar 17 1995 04:42 | 4 |
| I put suet out for the woodpeckers and other birds. the $%&%^ dog down
the road ate it all. 2 lbs of it.
ed
|
1182.23 | He's there to build another home... | ASDG::SBILL | | Fri Mar 17 1995 07:46 | 6 |
|
Last summer I found out that he was actually drilling large holes to make a home
for himself. When I went to spray his favorite drilling area I found him staring
back at me from inside the hole.
Steve
|
1182.24 | alternative home? | SMURF::WALTERS | | Fri Mar 17 1995 08:19 | 7 |
|
How about if you offer another home site?
Get a few feet of old log and drill a couple of starter holes
then rope it to a tree about 10' off the ground. Bait it with
suet (or pastry "caterpillars").
|