Post by super70sPost by jmcquownPost by super70sPost by super70sThe weatherpeople warned about not leaving anything outside that could
blow away but I didn't consider that.
Luckily nothing cracked and I was able to put it back together.
https://www.tractorsupply.com/tsc/product/stokes-select-no-spill-large-lante
rn
I'm glad your lantern feeder didn't crack. We had very high gusting
winds with that storm, too. The Brome squirrel buster feeder hangs
from
a shepherd's hook; it didn't go anywhere.
There's another very similar storm on the way!
Jill <---in Southern South Carolina
Yes this weekend, this time the feeder's going inside. lol.
I'll be sure to take care of them on Monday if there's a big snow on the
ground. That's the only time I ever spread seed on the ground (because
of squirrels).
I just put my lantern feeder on a 6' steel pole with an "umbrella" type
baffle underneath it, never seen a squirrel defeat it yet. Easier to set
it on the ground when refilling.
Not to sound like an advertisement but I love the Brome Squirrel
Buster tube feeder. It has a mesh cage on the outside of the plastic
seed tube. (The tube is ventilated to keep seed fresh.) The perches
are on springs. If anything heavier than a cardinal lands on it, the
perches fold downward and the seed tube closes. I've seen a few
squirrels try to get to it by hanging upside down on the mesh but they
are not at all comfortable trying to eat that way so they give up.
https://bromebirdcare.com/squirrelbuster-legacy/
Jill
That looks like a nice one and would probably be a good investment.
Looks like they're currently out of stock though.
What is the "free cardinal ring" for -- just a longer ring because
cardinals aren't as nimble as the smaller birds?
I don't know; my feeder is fairly old and doesn't have a "cardinal
ring". Perhaps it is because cardinals like a wider perch than the wire
ones? It doesn't stop them from coming around. :)
Post by super70sI had one of those weight-sensitive feeders like that on a pole several
years ago, the squirrels would just climb up the pole, raise their arm
up above their head and grab some seed, lol.
LOL Since mine hangs from a sheperd's hook squirrels can't climb up a
pole and reach *up* to grab the seed. White tail deer, however,
occasionally wander by at dusk. They approach it from below and lick
the seed out with their long tongues. I shoo them away and bring the
feeder inside until the next day.
Jill