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Old June 26, 2015   #1
TexasTycoon
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Default Jerk birds...

This is the second tomato the mockingbirds have gotten to this week.



Any more effective way to thwart them aside from picking earlier? I was thinking about getting one of those fake owls. We're in an apartment with a patio garden, so not a ton of options.



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Old June 26, 2015   #2
hoefarmer
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Default birds

I had good luck covering them with a paper lunch bag sealed shut with a clothespin. I waited until tomatoes were close to full size before covering.( I only had 11 plants) Women's nylons did not work, they can suck the juice right through the fabric.
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Old June 26, 2015   #3
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Put this one back covered with hot pepper. Spray all your plants with hot pepper as well. They do smell it. Would not come near it.
Squirrels ate 7 of my first baby cucumbers in one day. Not eating them again.
Just have to reapply after every heavy rain.
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Old June 26, 2015   #4
feldon30
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Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasTycoon View Post
This is the second tomato the mockingbirds have gotten to this week.

Any more effective way to thwart them aside from picking earlier? I was thinking about getting one of those fake owls. We're in an apartment with a patio garden, so not a ton of options.
I'd pick earlier. Vine ripened is pretty much a marketing myth. I've found that as long as I pick tomatoes that are half-blushed, they finish up just fine on the counter and taste no different.
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Old June 26, 2015   #5
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I had a mockingbird doing that in AZ with hard,green tomatoes. I put out a water pan and he quit.
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Old June 26, 2015   #6
Tracydr
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Quote:
Originally Posted by efisakov View Post
Put this one back covered with hot pepper. Spray all your plants with hot pepper as well. They do smell it. Would not come near it.
Squirrels ate 7 of my first baby cucumbers in one day. Not eating them again.
Just have to reapply after every heavy rain.
I think birds actually like hot peppers.
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Old June 26, 2015   #7
efisakov
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I think birds actually like hot peppers.


Tracy, it was raining by us so much my squirrels did not need water, they just wanted cucumbers.
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Old June 26, 2015   #8
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I have read they do it more during drought. Maybe try a water source for the birds.
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Old June 26, 2015   #9
Kikaida
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Have you tried putting up bird netting? Got a bag of it for $7.00
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Old June 26, 2015   #10
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I have read they do it more during drought. Maybe try a water source for the birds.
I agree, because I know it works.
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Old June 26, 2015   #11
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Pick them at first blush and don't look back.
Twenty counter ripened tomatoes beats fifty in a birds beak.
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Old June 27, 2015   #12
pauldavid
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Pick them at first blush and don't look back.
Twenty counter ripened tomatoes beats fifty in a birds beak.
Worth

Definitely agree with that!
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Old June 27, 2015   #13
TexasTycoon
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Well there's no room to put a water source, since it's an apartment patio (a very small one at that), and we live next to a pond so I don't really think that's the reason. We picked up a fake owl and will be counter-ripening the rest of the maters this season. I would put netting up (and I still will if the birds continue to be a problem), but I'm really not lookin to get my hands pecked off if a bird gets stuck in it.

Thanks for all the help, y'all! I think I mostly wanted to gripe about 2/4 of my tomatoes being lost to birds so far!

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Old June 27, 2015   #14
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Birds were eating my peas and tomatoes. I got a silver Mylar balloon and some iridescent Mylar tissue paper that I cut into strips and tied to stakes (diy bird flashing tape). It seems to be working pretty well.
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Old June 29, 2015   #15
TexasTycoon
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Birds were eating my peas and tomatoes. I got a silver Mylar balloon and some iridescent Mylar tissue paper that I cut into strips and tied to stakes (diy bird flashing tape). It seems to be working pretty well.
Oh that sounds like a really good idea! Our fake owl seems to be doing the trick so far, testing with one tomato blushing on the plant that I'm willing to possibly sacrifice to see if this owl works or not. Been moving him to a different part of the patio each day, and every time we pick him up all the birds in the area start making a fuss, so at least he's getting noticed. He's one of the ones that has a bobble head that swivels in the wind, so maybe a little more realistic. If it doesn't work out, my FIL has some nets he's offered to let us borrow since they didn't grow anything but flowers this year.
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