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Okay, serious question. How do I tried chicken wire, metal
poles, hot pepper, fake owls,
pie plates, "squirrel proof"
feeders (HA!), and more.
P.S. A .410 works but you need
to replace the feeders quite
often.
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is this a sexual question? |
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lol |
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you have absolutely no chance of beating the squirrels, they are genius when it comes to problem solving and I have seen documentaries where they can beat any trap or obstacle after only a few tries at it...If they want whats in the feeder, they will get it.. just don't resort to shooting them with a bb gun or anything , leave a few extra nuts out for them and let them be !!! |
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Put a plastic dustbin lid over the top of the hanging ones by fixing a hook inside the middle and hanging the feeder on it then hanging the lid where ever you usually do and if it's a bird table cut a hole in the lid and slip it on the centre pole right to the top of the pole but below the table. They cant grip platsic, the squirrels I mean. |
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Feed the squirrels. My grandmother used to take disposable pie tins, put birdseed in them, and then pour all of her cooking grease over top. It made a mold she would dump out for the squirrels away from her bird feeder. |
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I'm with woodchuck girl. This sounds like a sexual problem to me. |
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They're going to get in there, but you might as well have some fun with them. Put speakers out there, and find a CD that has a big boom at the beginning of one of the tracks. Play it loud when they're out there. Install some sort of electric fun that you can activate at your will. |
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Where is your bird feeder? If it is hanging on it's own pole, put a empty, upside-down two-litre pop bottle on the pole halfway up. They did this at work, and it worked! Well, until those smarty-pants squirrels started climbing a nearby tree and jumping over to the pole (landing ON the bottle!)...but then they moved the pole further away, and now the squirrels cannot get to the feeder! Success! |
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