A local eagle has figured out he can fly down the neighbor's road, navigate around the trees near his sawmill, cross into my field, and take out my female Muscovy ducks. The eagle hasn't targeted the larger male Muscovy, or the geese, but I've already lost 3 girls out of 12 this year, and a 4th is injured and I'm not convinced she's going to make it. The Muscovy are grass eaters, so it's really hard to confine them, so I can't really do the covered run thing. Eventually I'm hoping to have some paddocks instead of the one large field, but the area where the paddocks would have to go has no fencing and is adjacent to a major enough road that I have to make sure the birds stay off it.
Sooo... that left me looking for other deterrents. My reading suggested that scarecrows can help, particularly if there are dangley things that move, but only if you move them around regularly. That means I need a scarecrow that is light weight.
Also, the eagles tend to be an issue from Feb to June which can have some very wet weather here, so as much as natural fibers would have been nice, I wanted to go for things that wouldn't grow mold too quickly and easily.
Also, I'm totally into recycling!
The metal center support is two pieces that came from a friend's above-ground kiddy pool.
The body is a broken large bucket.
The head is a small bucket that was used to store something stinky, so I didn't mind re-purposing it for this job.
The hat came from a thrift shop several years ago and has been underutilized.
The coat was given to me because it didn't fit anyone in the household where it was cluttering a closet.
The pants came from a different friend and they're ripped and have lost their elastic.
The chicken wire that I used to make the arm supports was salvaged from somewhere.
The pants are just tied around the bucket with some used string.
The large bucket just rests on the "shoulder" of the pipe - I drilled a hole and then filed it to fit - the head is a stiff enough fit that it's just holding by friction.
It's held up by sliding the metal tube over a piece of rebar with the end sharpened - that we bought. We use them for a number of purposes and have thinner and fatter ones depending on the job being done. But it means that I can whack the rebar in with a box tool, then just slide the scarecrow over it and then a few days later, do the same in another location.
So now I need to gather up parts to build a second! I'd love to see all the beautiful scarecrows the talented people here on permies have made, so please post your pictures - they can't look any worse that mine!!
Sooo... that left me looking for other deterrents. My reading suggested that scarecrows can help, particularly if there are dangley things that move, but only if you move them around regularly. That means I need a scarecrow that is light weight.
Also, the eagles tend to be an issue from Feb to June which can have some very wet weather here, so as much as natural fibers would have been nice, I wanted to go for things that wouldn't grow mold too quickly and easily.
Also, I'm totally into recycling!
The metal center support is two pieces that came from a friend's above-ground kiddy pool.
The body is a broken large bucket.
The head is a small bucket that was used to store something stinky, so I didn't mind re-purposing it for this job.
The hat came from a thrift shop several years ago and has been underutilized.
The coat was given to me because it didn't fit anyone in the household where it was cluttering a closet.
The pants came from a different friend and they're ripped and have lost their elastic.
The chicken wire that I used to make the arm supports was salvaged from somewhere.
The pants are just tied around the bucket with some used string.
The large bucket just rests on the "shoulder" of the pipe - I drilled a hole and then filed it to fit - the head is a stiff enough fit that it's just holding by friction.
It's held up by sliding the metal tube over a piece of rebar with the end sharpened - that we bought. We use them for a number of purposes and have thinner and fatter ones depending on the job being done. But it means that I can whack the rebar in with a box tool, then just slide the scarecrow over it and then a few days later, do the same in another location.
So now I need to gather up parts to build a second! I'd love to see all the beautiful scarecrows the talented people here on permies have made, so please post your pictures - they can't look any worse that mine!!
Scarecrow-1.JPG
Let's hope it keeps the eagles away!
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