ot woodpecker eradicating

Other than the obviously death by lead poisoning. What is a good way of discouraging these birds from tearing up my cabin in the woods? Since deer season i have plugged up 12 bore holes in the side of my wooden siding. This guy likes to get in there chuck out the bat insulation and make a home. I come along place a treated board over the hole and he makes a new one right next to the new board. He always makes 3 different holes. I will patch them up on a sunday and he has 3 new ones by wed. I dont have a bug problem in the wall neither.
 
Put up some bird netting over the area. Should be able to get it at a garden center. Suspend it away from the wall so the bird can't raach the wall. It is nearly invisable because it is so fine. Never had the problem, but a naturalist at the Univ. of Wi always gives this answer to people who call in with your problem.
 
Call your local conservation dept. office they have people there that can help with ideas of how to take care of them. Many here in MO are not legal to shoot by the way
 
Supposed that you treated the outside with a good wood preservative maybe that would not taste too good for the woodpecker.
 
They will knock on metal for long distance dialing, but they don't drill holes for entertainment. Your wood is infested with bugs. They are trying to dig them out and eat them. Either way, your cabin is full of wood worms, borers and grubs. So yeah, shoot the birds. Then you will will have nice big bullet holes to stick the ice pick in to dig out the bugs yourself. I suggest 38 or 30-06, a few cans of it. Then build yourself a new cabin.
 
I have to agree with Tony on the steel. We had a wood pecker who loved to bang on the stove pipe cap of our camp when the fire wasn't lit. I agree also that you have a bug problem. That guy aint beating on your camp to atract a mate.
Loren, the Acg.
 
That sounds like either a downy wood pecker or a hairy wood pecker (I didn't name them). They drum on wood looking for soft punky wood that might have bugs in it. They do that a lot on cedar sided buildings and buildings with soft particle board siding. If they are taking insulation they may be nesting. Have you tried setting out dryer lint or dried grass so they don't have to attack your cabin for materials?

The bird may continue to drill a few more test holes next to your patch and then move on if there's no food. I have a 25 year old shed that gets a few more 3/16 inch test holes evey few years and that's all. A neighbor's house had squirrels take over a wood pecker hole and the squirrels tore up his attic.

If just one board is soft replace it. A fresh coat of paint or solid color stain will deter the birds if they have other places to hunt.

If the wood is already soft, a BB gun strong enough to kill the bird will also punch holes in the wood. Aim very carefully or just put up with them.
 
I have used shiny pinweels and streamers the flashing in the sun and the movement keep them away dont know why it works but it dose found it out an a wild bird store
 
Woodpecker go for soft or hollow-sounding boards. Our house has 40 year old ceder siding, and for the most part the woodpeckers leave it alone. And we have a LOT of woodpeckers. But they do go after some plywood trim pieces.

Check out your siding to see if you have some rotten spots. Scrutinize where they're attacking it; there's a reason the woodpeckers are focusing on that spot even after you cover it. Once you figure out why they're tearing up your siding, you may be thankful they pointed out a problem for you.
 
You've got bigger problems than a woodpecker.... You've got something in the wood... bugs.. or something that the pecker is going after. Kill that problem and you'll probably rid yourself of the woodpecker.

Rod
 
nail some 1/4" hardware cloth over the area that he is working sometimes that will deter them
 
Is that why they used to bang on our steel S&H silage boxes? I though it was just stupidity. I think they are neat to watch pecking at a tree, pretty to!
 
I had a woodpecker problem for the last several years. I filled the woodpecker holes with Vulcum chalk and put a good coat of stain on the siding and the woodpeckers went away. I still see the little devils in surrounding trees. This is not legal but you could feed them by filling their holes with peanut butter mixed with crushed rat poison.
 
So what you do,is you plant a few rubber trees around the cabin.Then when mr. wood pecker decides to drill into one of those rubber trees his bill will bounce off and break his neck !!
 
found on the web: bill

WOODPECKERS AND HOUSES
Although woodpeckers are beneficial members of the wildlife community, they can at times come into conflict with people. To a woodpecker, a wooden house is simply a large, oddly shaped tree, and the birds frequently choose houses as drilling or drumming sites.

Drilling and drumming are two distinct types of behavior.

DRILLING ON HOUSES
When woodpeckers drill on a house, they actually chip out wood and create holes in the search for food or the need to create cavities. Those houses that are attacked are often dark in color (browns and grays), or are natural stained cedar or redwood. Damage is usually located in shingling or corner posts, and the holes are generally quarter- to half-dollar sized and fairly deep. There may be one or two holes, or dozens, and the damage can be extensive. Often there is no particular pattern to the placement of the holes. Most of the drilling on houses occurs in the fall (September through November).

Several theories have been put forth to explain drilling behavior:
1) A primary driving force behind these drillings may be the need to excavate nesting and roosting cavities. In the fall, woodpeckers excavate several roosting holes in preparation for the coming winter. In the spring, there is a resurgence of drilling activity in preparation for the nesting season. These are the two times of year when woodpecker activity on houses is most prevalent.

2) One suggests that the culprits are inexperienced juveniles that are stressed for food in the fall. A house with hollow-sounding wood may seem like a likely place to search for insects. In fact, many small insects such as earwigs, cluster flies, and wasps, do hibernate under shingles and clapboards on houses in the fall. However, the presence of a woodpecker drilling on your house does not necessarily mean that you have a harmful infestation of insects. In fact, we have not heard of any cases in which the cause of woodpecker damage to a house was an insect infestation.

3) It has also been suggested that the woodpeckers are attracted to the buzz of electrical wires and appliances in a house. It may be that these sounds mimic the rustling of insects in the wood. However, in many instances the birds are found drilling in areas far from any wiring. It seems doubtful that this is a significant factor in drilling behavior.

In all cases, it is best to start deterrents as soon as the bird is noticed on the house, and before it becomes too attached to the site. Bear in mind that this is a temporary (seasonal) problem and that these measures can usually be discontinued in a few weeks.

COVER THE AREA BEING DAMAGED
Woodpeckers show strong preferences for particular sites, and are difficult to dissuade from drilling and drumming on favorite spots. However, there are some things homeowners can do to protect their houses. A large sheet of plastic, such as a painters' drop cloth or a heavy duty garbage bag, can be tacked over the wood or metal on a house. Attach the plastic sheet at the top and leave the bottom free to bunch and blow in the wind. The birds will then not be able to get a good footing on the plastic, and the movement of the plastic will help scare the birds away.

In other areas of the house, such as corners or under eaves, bird netting (i.e., fruit tree netting, available at garden supply centers) can be stretched (keep it at least 6 inches from the surface) so that the woodpecker cannot reach the wood or metal.

SCARE TACTICS
Try hanging several, 6 foot long mylar streamers (found in party supply stores) ten inches apart over the damaged area. In hard to reach or inaccessible areas, extend helium-filled mylar balloons (with very long strings) directly in front of the area. The movement of these materials when the wind blows will help to deter the birds. The homeowner can supplement these scare tactics by squirting a hose near the bird before it gets settled in to work in the mornings.

DO NOT
Waste money on plastic owls or rubber snakes. These items are of no use in deterring woodpeckers. Mothballs are also ineffective since the birds do not have a well developed sense of smell. There are no repellents that will effectively and safely deter woodpeckers.

CONCLUSION
Conflicts between woodpeckers and people can generally be resolved if homeowners make an effort to discourage the birds. Plastic sheeting and balloons and streamers are effective in deterring most woodpeckers. Leaving dead trees and snags around the yard will also help provide natural feeding, nesting, and drumming sites for the birds.

BIRDS AND THE LAW
All birds are protected by federal laws under the "Migratory Bird Act of 1918," as well as by Massachusetts state laws. It is illegal to destroy, relocate or possess birds, their nests or their eggs. The only exceptions are non-native species: House Sparrow, European Starling, and Pigeon. Trained and licensed wildlife rehabilitators, who have passed a federal and/or state-administered test, are permitted to care for injured or orphaned wildlife.
 
Be careful what you say on the subject. This is the www and big brother is probably watching. Peckers are probably part of the Fed. wild life protection laws of 1917. I was reading the other day where Cardinals are being added!!!!!!

So I had a calf and mother a couple of years ago penned up to monitor the event where otherwise the calf would be in harms way, only to come back one day and find 51 buzzards in the pen and on the rails.

Wink wink. Yep, they need protecting. Seeing wolfpacks of 20 or more black buzzards around here is common place. Ever watch them work over your livestock? And the joke about one buzzard talking to another: "Patience hell, let's go out and kill something" is not a joke with them (black buzzards).

Mark
 

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