nickyboy
Norven Mankey
- Location
- You want hills? We got hills
I like to keep the bird feeder topped up in the garden. It's one of those "squirrel resistant" one.
Resistant is a bit of a misnomer though. It has a squirrel-proof cage but the lid is the device's weakspot and the squirrels know this. To take the lid off (for refilling) you have to twist then pull. It took the squirrels about 5 minutes to work this out. Head down in the sunflower hearts, gorging away.
So I came up with a plan. I would stretch a heavy duty rubber band over the lid to stop the squirrels twisting and pulling. That worked great for a few weeks. They were dumbfounded by my ingenuity. Then they found that a squirrel can easily gnaw through an elastic band. I only hope it pinged off and it hurt when they did it.
Back to the drawing board. Next plan; string. Same basic idea. This worked great for a few weeks too. Then the squirrels found they could gnaw through the string. Not as quickly as they could get through the elastic band but got through it they did.
Back to the drawing board. I had a brainwave. Wire. They can't gnaw through wire. All I needed to do was fashion some retainer made from wire. I unbent some paper clips, twisted them together and hey presto, squirrel-proof feeder. Except it wasn't. They had a go at gnawing through the wire and failed. Then they realised that if they pulled really hard at the wire it could create enough slack to get the lid off. Squirrels are surprisingly strong
Enough's enough. Here's today's effort. It follows the wire principle. But it goes across the lid in two directions. And I twisted it together indoors with pliers. I think I have the upper hand in the arms race now. Let's see
Resistant is a bit of a misnomer though. It has a squirrel-proof cage but the lid is the device's weakspot and the squirrels know this. To take the lid off (for refilling) you have to twist then pull. It took the squirrels about 5 minutes to work this out. Head down in the sunflower hearts, gorging away.
So I came up with a plan. I would stretch a heavy duty rubber band over the lid to stop the squirrels twisting and pulling. That worked great for a few weeks. They were dumbfounded by my ingenuity. Then they found that a squirrel can easily gnaw through an elastic band. I only hope it pinged off and it hurt when they did it.
Back to the drawing board. Next plan; string. Same basic idea. This worked great for a few weeks too. Then the squirrels found they could gnaw through the string. Not as quickly as they could get through the elastic band but got through it they did.
Back to the drawing board. I had a brainwave. Wire. They can't gnaw through wire. All I needed to do was fashion some retainer made from wire. I unbent some paper clips, twisted them together and hey presto, squirrel-proof feeder. Except it wasn't. They had a go at gnawing through the wire and failed. Then they realised that if they pulled really hard at the wire it could create enough slack to get the lid off. Squirrels are surprisingly strong
Enough's enough. Here's today's effort. It follows the wire principle. But it goes across the lid in two directions. And I twisted it together indoors with pliers. I think I have the upper hand in the arms race now. Let's see