Anonymous wrote:I hate birds op I feel your pain try hanging those reflective bird deterrents by where it's hanging out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please be careful if some weird man asks if you know the air speed velocity of this bird.
???
The man is looking for the Holy Grail.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Please be careful if some weird man asks if you know the air speed velocity of this bird.
???
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can you describe what the bird looks like so we can identify it? Color, size, and any other identifying marks like stripes, secondary colors, a crest, iridesence, etc. There are at least a couple of us bird geeks on here who can advise you, based on species.
Or use the Merlin app to identify by sound.
Anonymous wrote:Please be careful if some weird man asks if you know the air speed velocity of this bird.
Anonymous wrote:For the past three days there has been a bird in my yard (sometimes it’s in the front, sometimes the back) that incessantly chirps so loudly that it’s driving me insane. It’s such a high-pitched chirp that I can hear it over my loud fan! I think it sits on my roof and in the trees close to my house, likely has a nest nearby. It didn’t stop until 1am last night and started up again around 4am, and then constantly all day long (I WFH.)
Why is it doing this? How can I make it leave? I don’t even care if it dies at this point, which is horrible, but I’m exhausted. Scaring it away hasn’t worked; I’ve tried clapping pie pans, spraying it with water, etc. it just leaves only to come back. Help!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:BB gun, pellet gun, or even slingshot. Bye-bye birdie.
This is probably illegal under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act
Anonymous wrote:I thought about posting here last week about our loud bird! I love him and am glad he’s happy, but he sits there all day and never changes his tune. Other birds fly to and from and break up their chirping, but not this guy.
Anonymous wrote:Not sure why so many people feel the need to be snarky about this. One option if you haven't tried it yet and can identify where the bird likes to hang out, is to get reflective mobiles or strips to hang in the area. Search on amazon for something like "reflective strips to repel birds". These were recommended to us by a tree company in an effort to stop wood pecking birds that were destroying our trees. The goal is to make the bird think the space is occupied and go somewhere else. It won't harm the bird, but also won't keep it from making noise -- but hopefully good get it to make the noise farther from your bedroom window