- Joined
- Jul 23, 2009
- Messages
- 36,517
- Reaction score
- 17,130
- Location
- Ceredigion
- Hive Type
- 14x12
- Number of Hives
- 6
I don't see the problem unless you're one of these (deleted) who want to kill everything.
Most of us don't want to kill everything, just specific individuals which become pests. It's better than being either one of these morons who want to kill everything or one of these ultra morons who don't understand ecology and seem to think the world is a Disney film.I don't see the problem unless you're one of these ( deleted) who want to kill everything.
Not too keen on your wording, maybe you might like to edit it. No need to be offensive.I don't see the problem unless you're one of these (deleted) who want to kill everything.
I doubt a crow is going to eat all those bees
Fixed it for youNot too keen on your wording, maybe you might like to edit it. No need to be offensive.
Not me. I don’t have a problem.I don't see the problem unless you're one of these (deleted) who want to kill everything.
A shepherd friend of mine local has had an issue with magpies in one particular field in late summer for the last few years- this particular family of magpies has worked out that they can sit on the back of his rams and peck at them, literally eating a hole into their backs.We had a problem in the village a few years ago where a crow went rogue. It stripped the flexible part of car wiper blade rubber . It pecked and pulled the seals out of double glazed windows and the rubber seals out of car door windows. It became a pest everywhere and many a ruse was tried to prevent the damage but it was estimated that it caused the guts of £500 damage before it departed the area due to high velocity lead poisoning. There are limits................
The shop owners have tried to put the spiciest packets closest to the door to try and deter him .
There is advice out there to put chilli on birdseed if squirrels are stealing it.
I believe that is the reason spicy food evolved. If birds eat them, the seeds are usually spread further than if mammals eat them.Should work. Birds generally can't taste capsaicin (spicy flavours) due to lack of the correct receptor but mammals can.
Bet you loved the chance to say that.a reasonable size murder
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