Will She Be Staying In A Hotel With...
News1 min ago
Ok, how on earth do you get rid of pigeons from the garden without chasing away the other birds? We have lots of hangers in the garden for all the wee birds (blue tits,sparrows etc) but the pigeons are taking over! We have a few crows and with them being so clever and all they shake the hangers and the pigeons gather at the bottom to collect the food. The wee birds really are missing out and the pigeons are creating such a mess. I want a kind way to get rid of them!
Can anyone help?
Thanks
No best answer has yet been selected by MsBehave. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.We are in the same position. We have 4 hangers and a bird table and at the moment are having to top these up every day. As well as the little birds, we have a pigeon gang, a dove gang, several blackbirds, 4 mutant elephant sized woodpigeons, an equally large magpie, an owl and an occasional visit from a sparrowhawk.I can't think of any way to select only the small birds. What seems to happen in our garden is that the larger birds seem content with the table and picking up any fallen seeds from under the hangers, while the small birds benefit from the hangers that the larger birds can't use.
While I can understand your frustration, I actually like the diversity of bird life that we attract - at times it is like a scene from "The Birds" as they all queue up on the fence waiting for a spot at one of the feeders.
Not an answer I'm afraid.
Last year we had robins, dunnocks and blackbirds feeding on the spillage from the feeders, This year, the pigeons discovered it and a flock of 12 refugees from the High Street have now worn a bare patch in the lawn with their constant pacing.
I have considered placing netting or a mesh of some sort over the lawn so that small birds could get in but not the pigeons. I didn't go ahead with that idea because I felt that in the event of a visit by a neighbour's cat, the birds' escape would bre hampered. So, like MsBehave, I'm still looking for a solution.