second this motion.I would love to spectate.
Trucks and popcorn would be easier for the neighbors than trucks and guns.
second this motion.I would love to spectate.
I've been trying to get this to happen at our Distribution Center and some of our stores. It's the most natural solution, and also bad ass.My uncle is a falconer, I’m sure his attack birds wouldn’t mind a field trip out your way…
The FAA contracted people to take care of pigeons on radar sites. I think they were required to use air guns. Falcons would be a much better/awesomer solution.I've been trying to get this to happen at our Distribution Center and some of our stores. It's the most natural solution, and also bad ass.
My RR from a 30ft? distance is enough to knock down and disable flight/mobility.. but they don't die right a way. a shovel chop to the head is required for a humane kill. If I were planning on a day of removal, I'd want something a little better for a clean shot/kill.Too confirm though I think someone already said it... would an old school lever action red Ryder have enough umph?
I was literally about to start this thread last week because they've become such a problem in my neighborhood. But all the houses are tall and hard to get close up roof angles on them. I hadn't thought of just throwing seed out to lure them down to ground level.
So it sounds like the falcon is the most "humane" and natural way to eliminate the problem. I'd imagine that the pigeons also would be scared off for some time. Like, they'd talk down at the watering hole.
Pigeon 1: "You hear about Tim?"
Pigeon 2: "Oh yeah... man I heard that a falcon came in and... well you know. POOF. "
Pigeon 1: "Damn... Tim... He was a good bird. Great scrounger. You know where the falcon was?
Pigeon 3: "Over by the Nielson's place. Just came outta nowhere. Got Bernice too."
Pigeon 1: "Bernice! Oh shit... I was gonna do some cooing on her the next time I saw her."
Pigeon 2: "I'm staying the hell away from that place, man!"
Pigeon 1: "Oh yeah, not going within a mile."
Pigeon 3: "Not worth the risk, for sure. Plenty of trash up at the McKendrick place for all of us."
I don't know why I have an opinion on this but I would feel bad poisoning them, however, I would take pleasure picking them off.I won't read the entire thread (maybe you addressed this) but poison the SOB's and be done with it.
That's where we differ. Problems need solutions. (obviously I don't have strong feelings on pigeons)I don't know why I have an opinion on this but I would feel bad poisoning them, however, I would take pleasure picking them off.
Insta-kill versus slow painful death.I don't know why I have an opinion on this but I would feel bad poisoning them, however, I would take pleasure picking them off.
I'm not a big fan of poison because of the possibility of it affecting other wildlife. Depending on the poison I know it can stay in their body to affect whatever scavenger (or neighbors dog/cat) that gets ahold of the dead body. When I worked pest control I remember we had to be real careful of this because of owls and hawks killing rats that were in the process of dying from poison, and then said hawk then also dies of the poison.I won't read the entire thread (maybe you addressed this) but poison the SOB's and be done with it.
I get it, I've worried about that too on my own property, then I poisoned the mice and voles, kept my dog away for a while and life was good. We still have hawks hovering the chicken coop, so I guess it was alright.I'm not a big fan of poison because of the possibility of it affecting other wildlife. Depending on the poison I know it can stay in their body to affect whatever scavenger (or neighbors dog/cat) that gets ahold of the dead body. When I worked pest control I remember we had to be real careful of this because of owls and hawks killing rats that were in the process of dying from poison, and then said hawk then also dies of the poison.
FIFYSee and I think if you poison one and the neighbor’s dog gets ahold of it that’s two pests with one stone lol.
Sorry to those of you that like dogs but also, you’re wrong.
Nope, you'd have a cat problem.FIFY
If we had cats in the neighborhood, I don't think we'd have a pigeon problem.