ChatterBank0 min ago
Magpies.
17 Answers
Is there a way to discourage these from the garden without upsetting the other birds. I have blackbirds nesting in my honeysuckle and the magpies are terrorising them, the mother goes mad when they are about and really goes for them but it's a bit distressing. I know it's nature and all that but I can't stand it, I love watching the chicks grow. If discouragement won't work do you think distraction might, maybe trying to feed them in another part of the garden away from the nest.
Thanks :)
Thanks :)
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by rockyracoon. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I have found the best way is to put a feeder away from the other birds feeding stations and then I cook some pasta and put this out for them, They take most of it back to their nest and I think by doing this they fill their bellies and don't feel the need to attack the smaller birds and their young in the nests. It seems to work for our magpies and pasta or cheap cooked meat bits are only cheap.
''I know it's nature'' is the important point here, even though you find it 'a bit distressing' and 'can't stand it'.
Magpies don't have a huge effect on garden bird populations (probably no greater than cats):
http:// www.rsp b.org.u k/wildl ife/bir dguide/ name/m/ magpie/ effect_ on_song birds.a spx
Magpies don't have a huge effect on garden bird populations (probably no greater than cats):
http://
Some distraction methods:
- Half-full plastic bottles or CDs hung up in trees to scare the predators away. Magpies don't like the way light reflects from the surface.
- GuardnEyes Scarecrow Balloon, available from Dazer UK.
- It may be possible to deter them by playing a tape of a crow or rook distress call.
- Half-full plastic bottles or CDs hung up in trees to scare the predators away. Magpies don't like the way light reflects from the surface.
- GuardnEyes Scarecrow Balloon, available from Dazer UK.
- It may be possible to deter them by playing a tape of a crow or rook distress call.
Thanks Andres, I'll give that a go and hope it works. In a couple of weeks it won't matter as the chicks will be gone and I'll grow a dense shrub so the blackbirds can nest safely next year.
Snags, I'd watch it if I were you, someone got flamed yesterday for suggesting an air rifle for similar activities ;)
Snags, I'd watch it if I were you, someone got flamed yesterday for suggesting an air rifle for similar activities ;)
I've just come home to find a magpie feasting on a baby blackbird while the parents go ballistic.
Opening the patio doors scared off the magpie and left me with two distressed blackbirds and a corpse. I dithered about removing the dead baby especially when I saw the mother sitting in a shrub looking down at the baby bird. This set me off wondering if birds have emotions and feel loss, is she mourning the loss of her baby?
The next time I turned round she was eating the baby so I think I now know the answer to my question!
Opening the patio doors scared off the magpie and left me with two distressed blackbirds and a corpse. I dithered about removing the dead baby especially when I saw the mother sitting in a shrub looking down at the baby bird. This set me off wondering if birds have emotions and feel loss, is she mourning the loss of her baby?
The next time I turned round she was eating the baby so I think I now know the answer to my question!