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Backyard Bird Problems
Any bird, a cardinal, chickadee or dove, can
become a "problem" when it does
something unpleasant. What's unpleasant depends
on what the bird is doing, and how you react. A
mockingbird's midnight song may be a musical
marvel to some, but an annoyance to others. The
flicker may be welcome at your feeder, but not if
his hammering damages the cedar siding on your
neighbor's house. The Canada geese at your pond
tempt you to offer them corn, until their
droppings foul your lawn. Birds come to your yard
to eat and bathe, to roost and nest. Birds can
cause trouble when they eat your cherries, drill
holes in your birch trees and fish for koi in
your pond. They can be hazardous to your health
when they roost by the hundreds in the trees at
the edge of your patio. They can be a nuisance
when they nest in your hanging baskets, on the
ledge over your front door or in your clothes
drier vents. |
What's the quickest, easiest way to eliminate problem
birds? The "quick fix" solutions that first
come to mind are: Shoot them. Trap them. Poison them.
Wrong!
All wild birds (except pigeons, English
sparrows and starlings) are protected by federal and
state laws. You may not trap, kill or possess protected
species without federal and state permits. The first step
in solving your wild bird problem is to identify the bird
and what's attracting it. Your goal is to remove what
attracts the bird, or build a barrier between the bird
and what it finds so attractive. Call your US Fish and
Wildlife Service Regional Office, your state wildlife
officer and (US Department of Agriculture) county
Cooperative Extension agent for advice.
Before you take any action, consider these questions:
* What do the experts recommend?
* Could it hurt people, pets and other wildlife?
* Will it reduce or eliminate the damage?
* Is it worth the cost?
Most bird problems do not have a simple solution. What
eliminates a bird problem in one case may fail in similar
situations. You may find a solution that seems effective,
but don't be surprised if it works only for a short time.
The secret to solving bird problems is to use several
tactics and to vary them so birds don't become
complacent.
Woodpeckers
Each year thousands of homeowners put out suet feeders to
attract woodpeckers. These handsome birds reward us by
consuming millions of noxious insects, including
carpenter ants and carpenter bees. While it's rare, an
occasional woodpecker may single out a house for
drumming, or worse, for a nest or dining site. Each
spring, when males set up territories and attract their
mates, these woodpeckers make their presence known by
"drumming." Normally they pick a resonant dead
tree trunk.
As more homeowners remove dead trees, woodpeckers may
turn to metal gutters, house siding and television
antennas. While drumming may be aggravating, it usually
doesn't physically damage your house. You can eliminate
the drumming noise by deadening the resonant area. Fill
the hollow space with caulk. Then distract the bird from
the drumming site by using scare techniques: balloons, a
child's pinwheel, flash tape, and strings of shiny, noisy
tin can lids, wind chimes and/or pulsating water
sprinklers. If that doesn't work, create a physical
barrier by screening the drumming site with hardware
cloth, sheet metal or nylon "bird netting." You
might encourage the bird to leave altogether by creating
an alternative drumming site nearby (but away from your
bedroom window).
Here's how to make a drum: Fasten two overlapping boards,
the back board firmly secured and the front (covered with
metal sheeting) nailed to it at only one end. Serious
structural damage occurs when woodpeckers drill holes in
unpainted, untreated plywood and cedar siding, window
frames and roofing. While no one knows for sure what
attracts a woodpecker to a house, your first step in
eliminating the problem is to check for signs of insect
infestation -- carpenter ants, carpenter bees and cluster
flies. You may want to consult with a licensed pest
control operator on how to remove the insects and
eliminate future infestations. It may be as simple as
caulking their tunnels and painting with exterior latex.
If you can't find any insects, try "scare"
techniques.
If you have a bird feeder that attracts woodpeckers, you
might think removing your feeder will cause the bird to
leave. Just the opposite may be true. Keeping a feeder
full of suet may encourage the birds not to look at your
siding for food. If you have dead trees in your yard, you
might think removing them (and the insects they harbor)
will solve woodpecker problems. Again, the opposite may
be true. Cutting down dead and decaying trees deprives
these birds of nesting, drumming and food sites, and may
force them to take a look at your house.
Fruit-eating Birds
It's early summer. You've planted your garden. Your trees
and shrubs are full of fruit. Before you get a chance to
enjoy them, your crops are harvested by birds. Again,
barriers are the most effective deterrents. Hot caps
(opaque plastic "hats" used to cover young
plants in the spring to prevent freezing) and inverted
crates can keep starlings from pulling up small plants.
Netting may keep starlings, catbirds, orioles, robins,
blackbirds and jays from your grapes, apples and
raspberries. Scare techniques may repel birds from
gardens. Placing feeders filled with sunflower, millet,
nectar, and peanuts nearby may also distract birds.
Fish-eating Birds
Herons and egrets at the edge of a pond create a picture
of tranquility. That is unless these and other
fish-eating birds (gulls, terns, kingfishers, diving
ducks, pelicans, cormorants and ospreys) are dining on
your prize koi. First try scare techniques, then
exclusion. While they may be unsightly, physical barriers
can deter most fish-eating birds. For small ponds,
complete screening with bird netting may effective.
Properly spaced monofilament lines suspended over a pond
may exclude gulls (every 4 feet), mergansers (every 2
feet), and herons (every foot). Perimeter fences provide
some protection from wading birds.
Roosting Birds
You don't have to park your car under a tree to discover
why people have no patience with roosting birds. Everyone
knows bird droppings pile up under a roost. An occasional
bird perching on a tree limb, gutter or fence may not be
a serious concern. But problems arise when pigeons perch
on your balcony railing, sparrows select your carport
rafter and gulls bask on your boat dock piling. When
starlings, grackles, blackbirds and crows roost by the
thousands in trees -- they create a serious health
hazard. Physical barriers may be the most effective way
to control birds roosting on buildings. To eliminate
birds on ledges try porcupine wire, stretching a
"slinky" toy, or stringing rows of
monofilament, one or two inches above each other about
two feet apart. Sheet metal or hardware cloth placed at
an angle on ledges may also make roosting more difficult.
Pruning may eliminate birds roosting in trees. Removing
some cover may be enough to make the roost site less
attractive. Scare tactics may provide temporary relief.
Nesting Birds
Birds often pick what seem to be the strangest places to
nest...in your gutter, clothes drier or kitchen fan vent
(house sparrows and starlings); above your front door
(barn swallows); in a bucket in your garage (Carolina
wrens); in your hanging basket (house finches); a pile of
twigs on your window sill (doves); in the shrubs next to
your front door (mockingbirds). The federal and state
laws that protect wild birds also protect their nests and
eggs. You must have a federal permit to disturb the
adults, nests or eggs. The most effective way to
eliminate these problems is to discourage the bird before
the nest is built by offering an alternative artificial
"nest" nearby, but out of your way. If that
doesn't work, contact a federal or state agent for
advice. Resist the temptation to destroy the nest or
harass the adults. House (or English) sparrows, pigeons
and starlings are not protected by law. You may remove
the nests, eggs and adults.
Hawks and Owls
The presence of hawks and owls (raptors) may cause
problems for people who raise free-ranging poultry and
small animals such as rabbits, for people who operate
bird feeding stations and for those who allow their
household pets to roam at night. Federal and state laws
prohibit the capture, killing or possession of hawks and
owls. The best solution to most raptor problems is
prevention. Keep your pets indoors, and your livestock in
pens. If you feed wild birds, expect a visit from a
hungry hawk or owl. Raptors at a birdfeeding station are
a problem only when they perch nearby, all day. You won't
see any birds at your feeders. Rather than get upset,
consider yourself fortunate to get a close-up look at
these magnificent birds. Stop filling your feeders for a
couple of days, and the raptors will look for dinner
elsewhere.
Nuisance Waterfowl
Ducks, geese, swans and cranes can cause problems near
rivers, ponds and lakes. They feed on crops, grass and
other vegetation. During their summer moult, flightless
birds may create more problems by trampling plants and
leaving droppings. Whatever the problem with waterfowl,
immediate action is crucial to successful control.
Farmers are encouraged to use early-ripening and
damage-resistant plant varieties. Another strategy,
delaying fall plowing, allows waterfowl to feed in
harvested fields. A combination of several frightening
techniques may produce the best results: scarecrows,
noisemakers, flags, balloons and dogs. Scarecrows should
be of simple construction and move in the wind. Put one
in every five acres and move them every two to five days.
Old cars, farm machinery, pinwheels, streamers,
fluorescent traffic cones and aluminum pie plates, if
they move in the wind and make noise can also be
effective waterfowl scares. Contact your state animal
damage control expert for advice on using explosives as
noisemakers. Flags may be the most effective and least
expensive control tool. Make two by three-foot black
plastic flags on four-foot posts. Put one flag per acre
in fields where waterfowl have been feeding, one per five
acres in fields with no damage. Balloons, if properly
maintained and frequently moved, can be effective
waterfowl scares. Fill a two-foot diameter balloon with
helium and anchor it with a 50 to 75 pound monofilament
line. A free ranging dog, trained to chase birds as soon
as they land, will discourage waterfowl.
PROBLEMS FOR BIRDS
Birds and Window Collisions
Contemporary homes and modern office buildings often use
insulated and reflective glass to replace walls. These
windows may be aesthetically pleasing to humans, but
often they are lethal to birds. Unfortunately, many birds
cannot distinguish the difference between the real sky
and a reflection of the sky in a window. In the United
States alone, it is estimated that each year during
migration, millions of birds fly full tilt into windows
and are seriously injured or killed. You can minimize
these collisions by breaking up the reflection on the
outside of the window with a window screen, flash tape
and bird netting. Life-size, animate "scares"
(plastic falcons, owls and balloons) and falcon or owl
silhouettes attached to windows with suction cups are not
effective deterrents. Planting trees and installing
window awnings to block the sun from hitting the window
may eliminate some reflection. Migration isn't the only
time homeowners have trouble with bird-window collisions.
Birds may hit your windows during breeding season, and in
the winter too. During breeding season, male cardinals,
woodpeckers and mockingbirds may "fight" their
own reflections in windows (and car mirrors). They'll
stop banging into the window as the breeding season ends.
You can discourage them with screens and other barrier
techniques. Regardless of the season, birds can fly into
windows when they're frightened while visiting a feeding
station. Either move the feeders a considerable distance
away from the window, or immediately adjacent to the
window (so birds don't get up to flight speed before
hitting the window).
Insecticides and Lawn Chemicals
If you attract birds to your yard, keep in mind that many
herbicides, insecticides and fertilizers are deadly
poisons. Ornithologists have known for several years that
many lawn-care chemicals kill songbirds and contaminate
their food. Mechanical and biological techniques may
provide less hazardous pest control options. Contact your
USDA Extension office and the Environmental Protection
Agency for information about integrated pest management,
biological and chemical pest control safety and
pest-resistant plant varieties.
Baby Bird "Orphans"
Sooner or later, no matter where you live, you'll come
across a baby bird. You'll have to decide: should you
rescue it or leave it to fend for itself? In most cases,
it is best to let nature take its course. Don't
interfere. If the bird is fully feathered, chances are it
doesn't need your help. Each spring, baby birds leave the
nest and have to learn to be adults. Their parents are
nearby. They're best equipped to take care of the babies.
You can help fledglings by keeping your dogs and cats in
the house. If the bird is unfeathered, try to return it
to the nest. If that's not possible, put the baby in a
shoe box and cover it. Get the bird to a licensed
wildlife rehabilitator. Do not attempt to take care of it
yourself. After all, do you know what kind of bird it is?
Do you know what to feed it? No matter what the
"first aid for baby birds" books at the library
say, you will kill baby birds if you offer them a diet of
human baby foods, hamburger meat, tuna, bird seed, milk,
hard boiled eggs, bread or water.
Injured Birds
Thud. A bird hits the window. You look out and see some
feathers sticking to the corner of the pane. You rush
outside and find a tiny yellow bird, still alive, lying
under the window. It's not moving. What's the right thing
to do? Get a towel. Gently put the bird in a cardboard
box or large paper bag. Put the bird in a warm, quiet
place. Do not offer first aid. Do not offer food or
water. Get the bird to a veterinarian or an authorized
wildlife rehabilitator (call your state wildlife agency
for a referral). Regardless of your best intentions, if
you offer first aid without the proper training, you're
likely to do more harm than good.
Cats
In the fall of 1990, a study on the effects of cats on
wildlife was reported in the scientific and mass media.
Researchers estimated that house cats and feral cats are
responsible for killing approximately 78 million small
mammals and birds annually in the United Kingdom. Feline
predation is not "natural." Millions of
backyard birds and other animals are slaughtered by cats
each year. Cats are a serious threat to fledglings, birds
roosting at night and birds while they're on the nest, at
the feeder and using a bird bath. If you are unwilling to
eliminate free-roaming cats, do not attract birds to your
yard by putting out feeders, nest boxes and baths.
Eliminating free-roaming cats is the best way you can
"protect" your backyard birds from cat
predation. Responsible pet owners keep their cats
indoors. Most local jurisdictions have enforceable leash
laws for cats and dogs. Contact your local humane society
for help.
Problems at the Bird Nest Box
Many homeowners invite birds to nest in their yards by
putting up nesting boxes. Almost two dozen species will
consider a human-made nest. How do you make sure the
"right" animal is using your bird nest? Learn
all you can about the birds you want to attract and offer
them a box that opens at the top and the front or side.
Monitor the nest box, and evict starlings and house
sparrows. The safest solution to insect infestations is
physical removal and soaping the inside top of the box.
If insects infest the box during nesting, apply a light
dusting of rotenone or pyrethrin. Do not use chemical
sprays. If snakes and climbing mammals are a problem, use
physical barriers to deter them. Try a PVC pipe over your
metal bird house pole, or metal sheeting on a tree or
wood pole. Smear the PVC or metal with Vaseline laced
with hot (cayenne) pepper. Avoid automotive grease, it
can be lethal to wildlife. Put a predator guard over the
nest entrance hole. Do not use bird houses with perches
below the entrance hole. If you find birds attacking the
adults, eggs or nestlings, what you can do depends on the
perpetrators. Eliminate house sparrows and starlings. All
other birds are protected by federal and state laws. You
may not harass or otherwise harm hawks, owls, falcons,
crows, grackles, jays and shrikes.
Feeding Station Problems
More than 82 million Americans feed wild birds. Sooner or
later, these backyard bird feeders experience some
problems: "wrong" birds at the feeder, no birds
at the feeder, sick and injured birds, predators, pests
and the "mess." Several factors determine which
birds will visit your feeders: the type of feeder and
seed you use, the presence of predators and how often you
sanitize your feeders.
Tossing a mix of seeds on the ground is an easy way to
feed birds. Just about every seed-eating bird in your
neighborhood will stop by. So will squirrels, chipmunks,
mice and rats. Any bird can feed on the ground, but in
the wild few birds other than turkeys and quail find all
their food there. Contrary to popular wisdom, large birds
like the cardinals and doves are not "ground
feeding" birds per se. All birds will use an
elevated feeder. The larger birds, with their larger feet
and bodies, require large perches. Cardinals and doves
will visit tube feeders, if you add a tray. And it's
healthier for these songbirds to feed at a feeder, not on
the ground. Any cage bird owner and zookeeper will tell
you that the ground below bird roosts and feeders is not
where you want your birds to dine. It's very difficult to
sterilize the ground below your feeders. So resist the
temptation to toss food on the ground. Put it in a feeder
where it's dry and protected from contamination.
Birds Trapped in Feeders
When they're nearly empty, some poorly designed bird
feeders can actually lure the birds inside, where they
become confused and may die in a panic. If you're going
on vacation, never leave your feeder full. It's better to
take it down, than take the chance that a bird will
become trapped. Avoid clear plastic feeders with feeding
ports an inch or larger in diameter. Chickadees will
squeeze inside to get that last seed, and try to fly
upward and out, forgetting the entrance is at the bottom.
The same can happen in a wood hopper feeder with plastic
walls tight to the roof.
Squirrels
Just about any yard that has trees, is a yard with
squirrels. If you feed birds, sooner or later, squirrels
will cause problems. Squirrels will eat your bird seed
and, when they "feel" like it, damage your
feeders. That is, unless you use safflower seed. Put it
in any feeder. Hang it anywhere. Squirrels don't seem to
like safflower, yet. Who eats safflower? Cardinals,
doves, chickadees, titmice and house finches. Want more
bird variety? Use sunflower. Most seed eating birds favor
it. The problem is, squirrels do too. If you want to use
sunflower, put it in a squirrel-proof feeder. You can
"squirrel-proof" any feeder by putting it on a
pole with a baffle (the underside lathered with Vaseline
and hot pepper) about ten feet from a squirrel-jumping
off point.
Other Rodents
Birds are attracted to sunflower because of its high oil
content. Some of that oil saturates the shell. If you
don't remove the spent shells, rodents are attracted to
the smell. The obvious solution is to rake up the shells.
An easier way to eliminate the shell problem is to use
hulled sunflower (also known as sunflower hearts or
chips).
Storing Seed
Regardless of which seed you use, store it in a metal
garbage can in a cool, dry place. Seed will turn rancid
when it sits in a hot garage or shed in the summer. To
avoid insect infestations in warm weather, don't store
more seed than you can use in a couple of weeks.
Problems at the Bird Bath
Water attracts more bird species than any feeder or nest
box. Bird baths can become bird problems when they're too
deep (small birds can drown in three inches of water) or
dirty (birds drink, bathe and defecate at a bath). Hose
out the bath daily and wash it with hot, soapy water at
least once a week. Add liquid bleach to the soapy water
to help kill algae and bacteria. Winter is the most
important time to offer water. There's no easy way to
keep water from freezing. Contrary to some reports in the
popular media, glycerin and antifreeze will kill birds.
The only way to keep water from freezing is to add an
electric water warmer or use a heated bird bath. Be
careful with electricity and water. Use a UL
(Underwriters Laboratory) listed warmer or bath, and
connect your appliance to a GFIC (ground-fault interrupt
circuit) outdoor socket.
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Bird Supply and see our
selection of Bird Houses, Bird
Feeders, Hummingbird
Feeders & Heated Bird
Baths .
Copyright © 2003 Shaw Creek
Bird Supply
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