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I rescued a starling from an empty fat ball net bag yesterday. The youngster was in a lot of distress. Luckily I was watching at the time and was able to effect an immediate release from the netting. Holding the bird was a wonderful experience. It stopped struggling and seemed to know that I meant it no harm.
The empty netting can be harmful and I suggest that they are removed from the fat ball and the fat ball placed in a container, protected from the sun and rain.
Does anyone have any ideas of how to make a safe container, for holding fat balls, out of everyday materials? I'm working on a few ideas using wood and wire netting.
Best wishes to all nature lovers everywhere...
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Yes, you're quite right orange-gnome. It was terrified, but having read a previous answer - about a starling losing its leg in similar netting - what else could I do? I was there on the spot instantly and cut it free. As soon as the fat balls are small enough I'll remove them from the netting and put them in wire cages with the peanuts. No more netting after that experience!
I checked the starling for injuries before I let it go. Beautiful colours, lovely eyes, long pointed beak. I picked up a swift once. It had bumped into my motorhome, out on the coast in the East Riding village of Tunstall.
I'm going to design a wire netting cage tomorrow...I recently made a seed hopper that works on the gravity principle; it works OK. Not my design though...I copied it out of a book on making nest boxes and bird feeders.
Regards.
when we were kids my dad used to help us make fat balls like candles, i know it sounds silly,
we'd clean out our yoghurt or jelly pots and hold a piece of string in the middle then i think he put everything in and left it in the fridge, in the morning he would squeeze it out of the pot and hang it on the washing line. don't get me wrong, after a while it would fall apart from all of the birds getting at it, but they would just pick it off the grass and we were left with the string at the end. hope this can give you a few ideas.
We always remove the netting from fat balls before placing them in the plastic containers, for the same reasons you've kindly expressed Outdoorman.
Like shaney, I occasionally make my own fat balls & the birds love them to bits.
When's this blinking rain gonna stop, so we can get out there & enjoy the birdsong?
Thanks everyone for your comments and ideas. I've just got back from a big garden centre, after buying �16 worth of fat balls, proper safe feeders and suet blocks.
The weather's been wet and cool (10 C) the last two days and the fat balls have held together well. They might melt as the sun gets things warmer though.
Only one problem now. We only have a small garden where the birds come to feed (18 feet by 18 feet) and it's also where Indoorswoman hangs her washing 2 or 3 times a week! Thankfully the weather has been too wet to hang out, so I've been having a ball with the birds!
There's always a snag.
Regards.
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