Goshdarn cat birds are feasting on my bees!

Started by tjc1, June 30, 2014, 07:47:33 PM

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RHBee

Quote from: danno on July 02, 2014, 09:28:29 AM
Starling,  English house Sparrows and Pigeons are the only birds that can be controlled at  anytime without a lic.   The rest are considered Migratory and are protected. 
Danno, if ignorance is bliss then I'm very happy. Is that a federal thing or a Michigan statute? Down here it's open season on pests like squirrels all the time. They dig up your yard and chew up the wiring in your house. I'd consider bee eating birds in the same category. IDK.
Quote from: 10framer on July 02, 2014, 09:46:18 AM
ray, i have to admit that i've been prairie dog hunting a few times and shot dove in argentina once.  those are agricultural pests, though.  in both cases it's wholesale slaughter.  i've passed up several free argentina hunts since then.  i'm glad i did it once and i may do t again but no time soon.  i'd drop what i'm doing now and go to south dakota to shoot prairie dogs, though.  so, i have to admit to a certain amount of sport hunting. 
Rob,I heard dove in Argentina are like startling here. They eat up the farmers crop. Prairie Dogs burrow and cause damage to livestock. There are sanctuary set a side for them. On private property they are pests. In my defence I did offer up the pie tins idea. :-D
Later,
Ray

tjc1

Hmm.... all of a sudden the thought popped into my mind - "Hey, that swarm of honey bees in my backyard (or hive in my attic) are a nuisance and a danger, so I don't care if they are protected, I'm sprayin' 'em". An example of why maybe it shouldn't just depend on our own personal perspective... This is truly just meant as an insight, not an insult!

danno

#22
  
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Danno, if ignorance is bliss then I'm very happy. Is that a federal thing or a Michigan statute? Down here it's open season on pests like squirrels all the time. They dig up your yard and chew up the wiring in your house. I'd consider bee eating birds in the same category. IDK.
Quote from: 10framer on July 02, 2014, 09:46:18 AM

It has nothing to do with squirrels.   Its the federal migratory bird act and has been around for almost 100 years. Its purpose is to protect only birds.   As far as a bird eating bee's, sure they do.   Its not realistic to think that bee eating only happens in your yard.  They are always in danger of this as soon as they leave the hive and as far out as they travel.   Bee's are also splattered on car windowshields all the time.  Keeping them strong and healthy can out weigh all these things.
To answer the question above on how to feed grape jelly to cat birds do a search on Oriole feeders.  The easiest way to make one is to use a half of orange nailed to something. After the birds have eaten all the orange out fill the shell with jelly


capt44

Year before last I had a hen turkey sitting next to my hive and every time a bee would come out she'd get it.
I was wondering why that one hive was getting weak.
I sit with my binoculars and caught the gal red handed.
Sooooooooo I told the land owner my problem and he said shoot it.
I sit down with a .22 magnum and eliminated the problem.
Oh yes and that turkey shore was good deep fried.
Richard Vardaman (capt44)

10framer

Quote from: capt44 on July 02, 2014, 08:48:32 PM
Year before last I had a hen turkey sitting next to my hive and every time a bee would come out she'd get it.
I was wondering why that one hive was getting weak.
I sit with my binoculars and caught the gal red handed.
Sooooooooo I told the land owner my problem and he said shoot it.
I sit down with a .22 magnum and eliminated the problem.
Oh yes and that turkey shore was good deep fried.

hope you're just trying to get someone fired up.  you just admitted to breaking at least 2 laws.

greenbtree

Your bird netting idea would pretty much eliminate the problem too, the bees could fly right through it, but it would make it a lot harder for the catbirds to catch them.  I like the catbirds also, I love how you can mimick them, and they will always answer back.

JC
"Rise again, rise again - though your heart it be broken, or life about to end.  No matter what you've lost, be it a home, a love, a friend, like the Mary Ellen Carter rise again!"

danno

Really guys I am just stating the law.   I'm far from a nut case animal rights person.    It would be a very safe bet for me  being a fur trapper for 40 years, a ADC company owner for 20 years, a big and small game hunter in 4 states that I have killed far more animals then at least most if not all of the members here.  In Nov. of 85 I even shot a Kodiak brown bear for just the hide and skull. (that is all that is required by the AK fish and game)  I've been on this site for about 8 years now and this same thing has come up every year.   Members should know that if they shoot that cow bird or that turkey that they could be arrested and telling several hundred members on a open forum is probably a bad idea  

greenbtree

I agree Danno.  I consider myself a middle of the road person when it comes to such things - I figure if you can solve the problem without great distress and without grabbing a gun that that is the better way to go.  I personally trap gophers around my house and approve of hunting for the table and even for trophies as long as the critter isn't endangered. But you are right, any bird that is native, and not considered a game bird is protected nationally by law.  While I would disprove of someone taking the tact of shooting first before trying ANY other solution, I am not going to run off and report a person, and I think all of the regular, long term forum members probably think the same way.  HOWEVER, others often come on this forum just casually, and sometimes to post a very extreme "green" agenda topic.  I agree that stating that you have engaged in an illegal act, especially after it has been brought to your attention that it is illegal, might be slightly dangerous.

JC
"Rise again, rise again - though your heart it be broken, or life about to end.  No matter what you've lost, be it a home, a love, a friend, like the Mary Ellen Carter rise again!"

RHBee

Quote from: danno on July 03, 2014, 03:46:19 PM
Really guys I am just stating the law.   I'm far from a nut case animal rights person.    It would be a very safe bet for me  being a fur trapper for 40 years, a ADC company owner for 20 years, a big and small game hunter in 4 states that I have killed far more animals then at least most if not all of the members here.  In Nov. of 85 I even shot a Kodiak brown bear for just the hide and skull. (that is all that is required by the AK fish and game)  I've been on this site for about 8 years now and this same thing has come up every year.   Members should know that if they shoot that cow bird or that turkey that they could be arrested and telling several hundred members on a open forum is probably a bad idea  

Well danno, I looked it up. Your right. Cat birds (Mocking Birds) are protected. While this may not change how I handle these issues, I certainly won't advise others to break the law on an open forum. Thanks for the heads up. Again.
Later,
Ray

RHBee

Quote from: tjc1 on July 02, 2014, 11:40:35 AM
Hmm.... all of a sudden the thought popped into my mind - "Hey, that swarm of honey bees in my backyard (or hive in my attic) are a nuisance and a danger, so I don't care if they are protected, I'm sprayin' 'em". An example of why maybe it shouldn't just depend on our own personal perspective... This is truly just meant as an insight, not an insult!

No insult taken. I've searched but never found any law that protects our bees. Maybe someone could point me in the right direction on this issue also.
Ray
Later,
Ray

GSF

Well Ray, I just learned something. I didn't know yall were talking about mocking birds. The birds we call mocking birds around here aren't migratory. I say that because I see them here year round.

I'll tell you something else about them. Set your cell phone out in the yard and call it a couple of times. It won't be long and you'll hear them trying to mimic it.
When the law no longer protects you from the corrupt, but protects the corrupt from you - then you know your nation is doomed.

deknow

Honeybees are not 'protected'.
Quote from: tjc1 on July 02, 2014, 11:40:35 AM
Hmm.... all of a sudden the thought popped into my mind - "Hey, that swarm of honey bees in my backyard (or hive in my attic) are a nuisance and a danger, so I don't care if they are protected, I'm sprayin' 'em". An example of why maybe it shouldn't just depend on our own personal perspective... This is truly just meant as an insight, not an insult!

danno

Here is alphabetical list of protected birds.   Catbird and mocking birds are to different birds and both are listed.   A bird does not have to fly south to be migratory




http://www.pacificwildlife.org/info/online%20docs/fmbtalist.pdf

tjc1

Quote from: deknow on July 03, 2014, 09:00:18 PM
Honeybees are not 'protected'.

Sorry - the 'it oughtta be so' perspective of a beekeeper... :(  Though is it possible that a swarm cannot be exterminated? I found this link on a local exterminator's blog:

Traveling Bees
Thousands of bees on plane wing delay flight at Pittsburgh airport

Published August 06, 2012 / Associated Press

IMPERIAL, Pa. –  A beekeeper says he had to be called into gather up a swarm of thousands of bees that delayed a Delta Air Lines flight from Pittsburgh International Airport to New York.

Master beekeeper Stephen Repasky tells KDKA-TV he was called out on Wednesday when the bees gathered on the wing of the plane as crews were getting ready to fuel the plane.

The beekeeper was called to remove the insects because they're a protected species that cannot legally be killed.
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/08/06/thousands-bees-on-plane-wing-delay-flight-at-pittsburgh-airport/#ixzz22m9OXVDq

tjc1

Amusing end to the story -

So i put out a dish with grape jelly and raisins on the stair railing where the cat birds like to perch before bee picking, and...

they disappeared! I watched and waited for two days - not a cat bird to be seen! I figure that they're so smart, they think it's a trap - anyways it seemed to solve the problem. Then this afternoon I hear a 'meow' behind me and there is a catbird looking at me 4 feet away. 'The raisins are for you", I say. She looks at me, turns, and hops into the raspberry bush which is just getting its first ripe berries... at least they're off the bees.