BrendAn Posted yesterday at 08:59 AM Posted yesterday at 08:59 AM Being in a WW2 hangar that is storage only except for my xair there are heaps of starlings and probably other culprits as well. Tonight I put a motion sensing owl up to see if it helps. Also thinking of hanging reflective hawk shapes as well. After any tips people may have to deter birds. Keep the plane tarped but it would be nice to have a reasonably clean area where the xair sits.
Blueadventures Posted yesterday at 09:22 AM Posted yesterday at 09:22 AM Tarp looks the only solution. Maybe make a 'U' frame in 20mm PVC pipe to allow pulling over the wing easier.
BrendAn Posted yesterday at 10:15 AM Author Posted yesterday at 10:15 AM 49 minutes ago, Blueadventures said: Tarp looks the only solution. Maybe make a 'U' frame in 20mm PVC pipe to allow pulling over the wing easier. Good idea. I was thinking of some sort of PVC tube frame that I could hang off the rafters or maybe just make a t hangar to sit on the floor . 1
onetrack Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago Move to W.A.! - we don't have starlings, and even one sighting of a starling brings out an eradication campaign. They would cost W.A. hundreds of millions in agricultural losses if they ever managed to get established here. Bright flashing lights, loud noises, sharp spikes mounted at nesting or roosting positions, distress calls of the bird species, and the cries of predator birds, are the main things that deter unwanted birds. https://www.ebay.com/itm/404281383875 1 1
BrendAn Posted 17 hours ago Author Posted 17 hours ago 4 hours ago, onetrack said: Move to W.A.! - we don't have starlings, and even one sighting of a starling brings out an eradication campaign. They would cost W.A. hundreds of millions in agricultural losses if they ever managed to get established here. Bright flashing lights, loud noises, sharp spikes mounted at nesting or roosting positions, distress calls of the bird species, and the cries of predator birds, are the main things that deter unwanted birds. https://www.ebay.com/itm/404281383875 Yes they used to have shooters stationed out on the Nullarbor targeting them. Horrible things 1 1
IBob Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago 5 hours ago, onetrack said: Bright flashing lights, loud noises, sharp spikes mounted at nesting or roosting positions, distress calls of the bird species, and the cries of predator birds, are the main things that deter unwanted birds. Unfortunately, birds seem to habituate to any static deterrent if there is food and/or nesting space. They are a perennial problem in vineyards. Netting of the vines has greatly improved in recent years, but prior to that vintners tried all manner of things: kites, balloons with big fierce eyes, gas guns, hawk cries. And this: An engineer in Hawkes Bay had a bright idea, persuaded a local vintner to let him try it. They erected posts with pulleys on top round a vineyard. An endless motor driven cable ran round the pulleys, and the idea was that various scare devices (balloons, kites, flashers and noise devices) could be attached to the cable and would move constantly round the vineyard. A couple of weeks after all this went in, the vintner called the engineer and said 'We have a problem, you're not going to believe this'. The birds, and there were many, had taken to sitting on the wire, and were happily riding round the vineyard, diving down occasionally whenever an especially juicy bunch of grapes hove into view............... 5
BrendAn Posted 16 hours ago Author Posted 16 hours ago 6 hours ago, onetrack said: Move to W.A.! - we don't have starlings, and even one sighting of a starling brings out an eradication campaign. They would cost W.A. hundreds of millions in agricultural losses if they ever managed to get established here. Bright flashing lights, loud noises, sharp spikes mounted at nesting or roosting positions, distress calls of the bird species, and the cries of predator birds, are the main things that deter unwanted birds. https://www.ebay.com/itm/404281383875 We moved here from wa. 1 1
skippydiesel Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) .22 rat shot!😈 Edited 15 hours ago by skippydiesel 1
BrendAn Posted 15 hours ago Author Posted 15 hours ago 5 minutes ago, skippydiesel said: .22 rat shot!😈 I have been using it. The building is so high it's hard to get close enough to do any damage. May have to go to .22 shorts. Have to be careful I don't punch holes in the roof. You can get 38 ratshot , that might be worth a try. 1
T510 Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Looks like your X-Air has some interesting hangar mates 1
BrendAn Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago 7 minutes ago, T510 said: Looks like your X-Air has some interesting hangar mates Yes. A bit of a museum in there. I heard a company in Canada owns all the Grumman trackers. Bought for parts. Wonder what they would be using them for over there. 3
BrendAn Posted 14 hours ago Author Posted 14 hours ago Just googled it. They do firefighting Conversions on the Grumman's. 2
skippydiesel Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago There was an anti perch product called Hot Foot (I think) that might be worth exploring. 😈 1
Love to fly Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago We use party lights purchased on Amazon. They flash through red, green & white and are really effective. USB powered and under $50. Previously tried just about everything else. Bought an old parachute and kind of hung over plane. Helped but annoying. Owls did nothing 🤷♂️ ultrasonic thingy did nothing. 🤷♂️ 2
BrendAn Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago I thought of hooking an electric fence up to the steel rails the door rollers run on. Because the birds all sit on them and enter and exit the building there too. Wonder if that's ever been tried. 1
Love to fly Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 12 minutes ago, BrendAn said: I thought of hooking an electric fence up to the steel rails the door rollers run on. Because the birds all sit on them and enter and exit the building there too. Wonder if that's ever been tried. Won't work as they aren't earthed when they are on them. Often used to have birds sitting on ours at the farm. 2 2
Thruster88 Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 16 minutes ago, BrendAn said: I thought of hooking an electric fence up to the steel rails the door rollers run on. Because the birds all sit on them and enter and exit the building there too. Wonder if that's ever been tried. Birds were roosting on the diagonal bracing cables in my shed roof. I coated them with plenty of wheel bearing grease and them problem was gone. 3
facthunter Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Near impossible to keep them out of big farm sheds. They'll nest in the roof insulation. Peck holes in it. Nev 2
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