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Sparrows in the roof!

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ladyAK | 19:38 Tue 27th Jun 2006 | Animals & Nature
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There are sparrows nesting in our roof!

Is this a health hazard? And how do we get rid of them?!
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No!!

I dont think they would be a health hazard.You should leave them there as sparrow numbers are hitting a low.

when they have flown the nest make sure there is no way for birds to enter next year.

But best to leave them for now.

kozmic
-- answer removed --
House sparrows are in decline and you are not allowed to shoot them when they have flown the nest find how they got in and seal the hole
try some rat poisen then
dave2222-think you need the rat poison not the birds!
ok then wait while one gets traped in your roof and starts rotting and stinking
Question Author
yeh thats what I'm scared of... smelly sparrow corpses in the roof!

Sorry, I should have said I'm in Portugal - there doesnt seem to be a shortage of them here (theres 100's in the roof!), but that said, I'm not going to try to shoot them (I can't even hit a clay pigeon!), and I've seen these deterrant things you hang up...

But what I'm wondering is, does anyone know if they migrate? Or at least abandon their nests at a certain time of the year?

Or will i have to live with the little ******* forever!

if you feel like that and have no feelings kill em
have already had that problem before & with pigeons,squirrels etc, like kozmic blues says best leave them till they fly the nest & then check where they're coming in & get the entrance filled in, no need for nastiness!
ok then lets agree let them leave first then cover the hole
agreed :-)
Question Author
Thanks guys - much appreciated
theres a million holes in the roof, but it'll be fun!
Please leave them alone. They are literally a dying breed and placed on the RSPB 'red list. i.e.- Red list species are those that are globally threatened, whose population or range has declined rapidly in recent years (ie by more than 50% in 25 years), or which have declined historically and not recovered. Amber list species are those whose population or range has declined moderately in recent years (by more than 25% but less than 50% in 25 years). If in the unlikely event you have one die in your loft they are unlikely to rot in your loft, rather they tend to dessicate or dry out.
5 star answer krusty :-)

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