And if you do keep your cat indoors, consider a “catio” as a compromise.
Regi
One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.
Wm. Shakespeare
> On May 18, 2018, at 8:11 PM, Marie P. Read wrote:
>
> Hi Jim,
>
> It would not be legal to move it, and not likely to work
Hi Jim,
It would not be legal to move it, and not likely to work anyway.
You might try putting a chicken wire fence around the nest—several feet in
diameter so the adults can come and go easily. Hopefully when the young fledge
they will go up into the bush and not onto the ground. But at that
I ran into the surfeit of juncos on Sunday, while walking my dog Sandy from
Larue Road to Curtis Road along Fisher Settlement Road, which parallels Miller
Creek in the Danby State Forest. If there were any Pine Warblers along there
(as seemed likely enough), they were swamped by all the Juncos:
Looking for Fox Sparrows I moved to our basement which looks out over the
area under our feeders which are at 2nd story level. What did I find?The
rest of the juncos which haven't made it to Laura's yard yet! Can't count
'em, but must be 70 or 80 and there are ton above at the feeders. Also many
Greetings!
In my backyard, juncos use all the feeders with perches—the silo and tube
feeders filled with black sunflower seeds and the tube feeders with niger
seeds—especially when the snow is deep. Otherwise, they primarily eat the
feeder spillage on the ground. The only feeders they don't
Juncos have been eating from my sock feered for the last two years.
- Original Message -
From: Caroline Manring
To: cayugabirds-l@cornell.edu
Sent: Saturday, January 22, 2011 5:55 PM
Subject: [cayugabirds-l] Juncos learn new trick, Lab feeder favs
The Juncos that have