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Old 01-24-2010
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Hagar Hagar is offline
 
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Location: Pincher Creek,Alberta
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Default Why is the bird feeder allways empty?

I think I found the answer
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Old 01-24-2010
alittlej alittlej is offline
 
Join Date: Jun 2009
Location: Ardmore ... N/E Alberta
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you know it is a little early for baiting
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Old 01-24-2010
big zeke big zeke is offline
 
Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 485
Default I know the feeling

We had a fairly large squirrel that could flip off the top of our feeder and get right inside of it. This guys was the size of a small cat and most mornings we could see his tail sticking up through the top of the feeder - my kids named him Squirrely Joe after a former boss of mine. One day I put a big rock on the lid so he couldn't open it...he just gnawed a hole where the seeds come out (the feeder was made of wood) and crawled in that way.

I no longer use the feeder (the outlet hole is huge) but it does make a nice rustic reminder of Squirrely Joe.

Zeke
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Old 01-25-2010
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Matt L. Matt L. is offline
 
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Location: Mayerthorpe area
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Ah, that's a familiar sight! We got about fourteen of them hangin' around our place.
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Old 01-25-2010
duffy4 duffy4 is offline
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Location: Rocky Mountain House
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I have seen moose tracks around one of our feeders that lay broken on the ground.

At one time I was spending a lot of time in a particular tree stand and I thought I might bring a bird feeder out and set it up close by so I could watch the birds at it while I was there hunting. I even thought it may put the deer at ease as they approached. Then I got thinking that it may be considered baiting if the deer could reach it.

Hagar, isn't that Jack O'Connor carrying his sheep off the mountain?
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Old 01-25-2010
dgl1948 dgl1948 is offline
 
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When we first started to see this a few years ago everyone thought it was great. It was not long before every ceder in town was trimmed. When the snow got deep the rest of the evergreens got trimmed. Last year we had three of them run into cars, only one so far this year. Now our gardens are visiteed in the summer, oh yes, there are some flowers they like more than others. It is far better to encourage them to stay in the wild/
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Old 01-25-2010
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Matt L. Matt L. is offline
 
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Location: Mayerthorpe area
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Yeah cedars are a prime delicacy to mulies. I love watching them though. I've learned quite a bit about herd dynamics with them around. We've even had bucks rubbing shrubs and sparring in the yard in the fall. It's really funny when one old doe comes and there's no seed in the feeders, she'll just stand and look at us in the house as if she was saying well, are you going to fill the feeders?
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