Running parallel to the flying fox as a destructice native pest is the white cockatoo.
This week we have been invaded by hordes of these screaming pests. Just their screeching alone is bad enough but the damage they are doing makes them a pest. They chew at the patio rails, they wreck many garden plants and they to top things off they have decimated my pecan tree in a couple of days and completely ruined this years crop.
Most years we expect to lose about 10% of the nuts to the cockatoos but 100% is a bit too much to accept peacefully. So from todat they are officially on my pest list.
Running parallel to the flying fox as a destructice native pest is the white cockatoo.
This week we have been invaded by hordes of these screaming pests. Just their screeching alone is bad enough but the damage they are doing makes them a pest. They chew at the patio rails, they wreck many garden plants and they to top things off they have decimated my pecan tree in a couple of days and completely ruined this years crop.
Most years we expect to lose about 10% of the nuts to the cockatoos but 100% is a bit too much to accept peacefully. So from todat they are officially on my pest list.
Good Lord, Bunyip, those mechanisms seem complex. Wouldn't just the netting over the tree do the job?
... So from todat they are officially on my pest list.
Cockatoos are not fussy eaters; however, do not give your cockatoo avocados, chocolate, or alcohol in any form. Deep fried should never be given to a cockatoo, nor should salted treats such as potato chips, pretzels that have salt, and saltines that have been salted.
Apparently getting cd's and hanging them from some string works well. Possibly in a few years the Germans/Americans will be able to help you out (don't ask me to explain).
N.T
Nioka.....
She solved the problem by getting a very realistic cardboard cut-out of a hawk in attack mode. The first rain wiped out the cardboard hawk, made it go all soft and soggy. So they got another one and traced its outline on a piece of galvanised iron, then painted it up in hawk colours.
Now they had a weather-proof hawk. They made up a second hawk as well - now the magpies don't come near the window.
They regularly change the positions of the hawks, and sometimes display only one of them, sometimes two, the idea being to keep the magpies on their guard and stop them from becoming complacent about the hawkes.
Good advice also if you can get a good recording of a raptor all the better.
so.....let me get this straight...........
Nuke the cockys...........Nuke the Fruitbats...........Nuke the whales
Keep the Raptors
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