We have blue tits nesting in a box that we placed in our garden for the very
first time this year, so we're new to the experience.
The adults have been feeding chicks for the best part of 3 weeks now and I
assume they'll be ready to fledge any time.
Today I've see a woodpecker on the box twice and I'm concerned for the
safety of the chicks. Any suggestions about what, if anything, we can do?
We thought about supergluing some metal around the hole to prevent the
woodpecker drilling, but are afraid in case we upset the parent tits.
Any advice please?
Jan & Mike
I'd go for it myself, and superglue some metal round the hole. I'd suggest
going out late at night with a torch and doing it then. If the woodpecker
gets in, they're dead, anyway.
Just my idea. Good luck. Let us know.
Tina
But would a determined woodpecker be put off by metal just round the hole?
It's capable of making a hole in all the other parts.
Trouble is that metal all round could cause condensation inside.
Beehives which have attracted the attention of woodpeckers are sometimes
protected by wire netting.
Mary
>
> Tina
>
>
>
>
Klara
>
--
Just let nature take its course. Aren't young woodpeckers entitled to
a decent meal too?
Well, I agree, probably they are, but you have to realise it can be
difficult for some people, including myself, I might add to see predation by
birds on other birds.
I have had this argument before with Malcolm and you have to understand that
women are reared from birth to take care of helpless things.
How else would we be prepared to waste (?) so much of our life rearing
children? when we could be doing much other exciting things? It's
conditioned.
Tina
> you have to
> understand that women are reared from birth to take care of helpless
> things.
Never worked for me.
Cheers,
Phil
--
Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan.
> Trealaw Boy <treal...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
> news:4a864d2c.04052...@posting.google.com...
[-]
> > Just let nature take its course. Aren't young woodpeckers entitled to
> > a decent meal too?
>
>
> Well, I agree, probably they are, but you have to realise it can be
> difficult for some people, including myself, I might add to see predation by
> birds on other birds.
> I have had this argument before with Malcolm and you have to understand that
> women are reared from birth to take care of helpless things.
> How else would we be prepared to waste (?) so much of our life rearing
> children? when we could be doing much other exciting things? It's
> conditioned.
I can assure you that the conditioning sometimes fails :-)
regards
sarah
--
Think of it as evolution in action.
snips ...
> women are reared from birth to take care of helpless things.
> How else would we be prepared to waste (?) so much of our life rearing
> children? when we could be doing much other exciting things? It's
> conditioned.
>
>
> Tina
Like running around looking after men ;-))
--
Larry Stoter
Hmm. I don't know of anything more exciting than rearing children!
Mary
Is that in the spirit of the ancient curse: "May you live in exciting
times"?
Mike.
--
If reply address = connectfee, add an r because it is free not fee.
No, I got over that one, I was no more born to iron clothes than a man was.
If we both have to go to work full time, then both of us need to share the
chores at home. Simple. Cook, or wash up afterwards. Hoover, or do the
shopping.
If a woman works full time, then her partner needs to share the household
chores 50/50.
What a shock this might be.
Women are not servants any more.
Tina
Don't you? Your life must have been less exciting than mine. I cannot think
of anything much worse.
Tina
Are you a woman then Phil? Phyllis? Philomena?
>
> --
> Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan.
German reply to follow.
Tina
Tina
They say, "don't knock it till you've tried it". I think I'll pass on
that one. However, I'm closely in touch with my feminine side. It
tells me what to do. All the time.
>> Das Ewig-Weibliche zieht uns hinan.
>
> German reply to follow.
Ausgezeichnet!
Cheers,
Phil
News to me.
Anne
Are you saying you were never bought a doll as a child, and a pram to take
it out in like a *real* mother?
Tina
Sure I was. And I still have a splendid dolls' house which my father made for
me. But I was far more interested in Dinky cars than in trundling a pram with a
plastic doll.
Anne
Tina
Likewise. Also cliffs. Nearly put me off birds for life when I clawed my way on
to a ledge after getting cut off by the rising tide at shore level and found
myself eyeballing a fulmar - fortunately not close enough!
Anne
Wellll ... in our house we do share chores - I do what I do best and he does
what he does best. I don't want to do the things he likes doing and some of
them I CAN'T do.
It's not a matter of being a servant - although I believe that we're all
servants these days - but of common sense. There's no point at all in
sharing, say, cooking if one of the pair doesn't do it as well as the other.
Birds don't share everything equally.
Mary
>
> Tina
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
Life's what you make it.
Mary
>
> Tina
>
>
>
>
>
>
Excellent! Glad you didn't get tooo close, they spit nasty stuff.
No cliffs here. I live just about as far from the sea as it is possible to
get in the UK.
We have fields and woods instead and abandoned gravel pits nearby for
waterfowl here in Leics.
Tina
My uncle made me a beautiful doll's house which is into its third generation
of playing by boys and girls. I had a doll (not plastic) but no pram, too
expensive. Always wanted one though and our daughters loved theirs - bought
second hand and refurbished as were their bikes and tractors.
I can't see what's wrong with dolls, if children enjoy them. They're not
forced into playing with them. Our boys loved Action Man but the girls
wanted life-like dolls, not the malformed likes of Barbie.
We played family games and listened to the radio, outside we skipped, played
shops and houses and made tents with clothes horses and blankets. If Dinky
cars were around we didn't have them, couldn't afford them I suppose. Our
firstborn loved them from being a toddler, carried one round with her
everywhere and showed adults where the 'owil' went.
There were no trees anywhere near our cobbled streets but I climbed walls -
don't suppose that counts though. Except that they're more difficult than
trees and good practice for the cliffs at Flamborough which I first almost
lived on when I was eight and fished for crabs from using limpets as bait.
There were trees on the uncle's farm but I preferred driving his tractor
when he moved on from horses, I was ten.
I don't think it had a bad effect on me, any more than if I'd played with
dolls. What's the problem with dolls anyway?
Mary
>
>
>
>
I had one too - it had my pet white mice living in it!
Klara
--