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"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "2pods" wrote in message ... What I want to know is what herons taste like ? snip Resist....urge....to....say.... Aghhhhhh Good enough for me and the cats :-) After all, eating is not killing . Peter THEY TASTE LIKE CHICKEN!!!!! -- BV Webporgmaster of iheartmypond.com http://www.iheartmypond.com I'll be leaning on the bus stop post. |
~ Windsong ~ wrote:
gets blown off, ## It can't get blown off if it's put on right. You don't just toss it ## over the pond. Right. I've had winds that could blow _anything_ away. Herons have stabbed through nets, ## Herons do not STAB fish through nets or any other way. Herons GRAB ## the fish with their beaks - they do not stab them! That's both simplistic, and wrong. Herons strike with a stabbing motion, so while that isn't the mechanism they use to kill fish, it's still descriptive. In any case, Herons _have_ been known to stab fish. I don't know if it's accidental or what, but enough people have found dead fish with triangular holes in them to be sure that Herons do occasionally do that. ## I have never had one tangled up in the net. The net is too tight to tangle a large bird. A small bird may get a head and wing caught. Also the Feds do not post the "pond police" in your backyard! LOL!!! You've got to be kidding me!!!! :-D And that's an excuse, why? The Feds won't post somebody in your back yard to make sure you aren't murdering your neighbors, either, but it would still be wrong to do it. -- derek |
Benign Vanilla wrote:
"2pods" wrote in message ... What I want to know is what herons taste like ? snip Resist....urge....to....say.... Aghhhhhh THEY TASTE LIKE CHICKEN!!!!! Thanks, Jeff. Now the urge for me to say it has gone away :-) -- derek |
~ Windsong ~ wrote:
And we should always offer them to posters asking for solutions. Then they can read through, mull over the possible solutions and make a choice. ## How can they make an educated choice without hearing form those who ## tried Huh? How can they make an educated choice when you keep telling them there is one, and only one, way? You're sounding like solo... -- derek |
In article ,
"Benign Vanilla" wrote: "Katra" wrote in message ... snip My border collie is faster than any bird, and has killed small possums coming into the yard. The thing is, if your dog manages to grab and kill a heron (and I know Jewely would!) how much trouble would you be in? It's not like you meant for it to happen, and the great blues and little greens are not an endangered species. I like Herons and have rescued them and would hate to see one killed, but accidents can happen. I'm just wondering what the authorities feel about the natural instincts of certain breeds of dogs? snip I suspect you'd be in no trouble at all. Your dog in your yard? Hardly a crime. Now, if you shot the bird and held it down for spot to kill, that might be an issue. That's kind of the way I look at it... ;-) Border collies are excellent guard dogs. -- K. Sprout the MungBean to reply "I don't like to commit myself about heaven and hell‹you see, I have friends in both places." --Mark Twain |
In rec.ponds ~ Windsong ~ P@p wrote:
"kathy" wrote in message oups.com... Carol wrote And in the end only bird netting works Netting is always an option but some people really don't want to net their ponds. For them it spoils the look, ## Yes it does effect the looks of the pond. But so does those tall gawky water sprayers and wire/string strung all over the place. I didn't want to net mine either considering they're both in front of my house. However I was sick and tired of losing koi and GF to these predators. We did try other methods first. Nothing worked. Perhaps other people can afford the endless losses and don't get attached to their fish. I do. It was both an emotional issue as well as a financial issue. When herons and King Fishers discover your pond all you become is a feeding station for them. Also, if you're in an area frequented by these birds you will usually (but not always) also end up with large fish eating water snakes and bullfrogs. At that point you may as well buy a fish hatchery. Here's a potentially radical idea. How about tolerating the birds and designing a way for them to gravitate towards the far more replaceable fish (and less emotionally attached) than the expensive koi? The best design I've seen so far is a deep, vertically flat sided pond fed by a long, shallow stream/waterfall at a public koi pond. The stream was teaming with mosquito fish, crayfish and occasionally goldfish fry. The herons almost always ate from there instead of attempting to get anything in the main pond because they could wade into the stream and have pretty easy pickings. Loosing those kind of fish wasn't a big deal (although I suppose losing too many mosquito fish could be a problem in mosquito season, but it's easy to get more). The only koi lost was due to human problems when a teen threw a stepping stone from the garden into the pond and it hit a koi. The stream served a second purpose too. It was planted with milfoil and other plants, so it acted as a vegetative filter. The whole stream had pretty good daylight exposure for plant growth while the actual pond was partially shaded. Actually, the only foreign species in the pond was a muskrat that kept trying to build its nest in the pump house. Watching the herons catch the fish in the stream added a nice natural touch I thought. |
"Cichlidiot" wrote in message ... In rec.ponds ~ Windsong ~ P@p wrote: "kathy" wrote in message oups.com... Carol wrote And in the end only bird netting works Netting is always an option but some people really don't want to net their ponds. For them it spoils the look, ## Yes it does effect the looks of the pond. But so does those tall gawky water sprayers and wire/string strung all over the place. I didn't want to net mine either considering they're both in front of my house. However I was sick and tired of losing koi and GF to these predators. We did try other methods first. Nothing worked. Perhaps other people can afford the endless losses and don't get attached to their fish. I do. It was both an emotional issue as well as a financial issue. When herons and King Fishers discover your pond all you become is a feeding station for them. Also, if you're in an area frequented by these birds you will usually (but not always) also end up with large fish eating water snakes and bullfrogs. At that point you may as well buy a fish hatchery. Here's a potentially radical idea. How about tolerating the birds and designing a way for them to gravitate towards the far more replaceable fish (and less emotionally attached) than the expensive koi? The best design I've seen so far is a deep, vertically flat sided pond fed by a long, shallow stream/waterfall at a public koi pond. $$ Oh that would be lovely if we were rich. :-) Have you any idea what something like that would cost? If we had that kind of money we could call in some pond builders and redo both ponds. In fact replace them with one huge 3 to 4,000 gallon pond. But where would I put the plants then if there are no shelves? How would this keep the (bullfrogs, snakes, snappers) King Fishers out of the steep sided pond? Steep sided plants ponds are not attractive or natural looking. The stream was teaming with mosquito fish, crayfish and occasionally goldfish fry. The herons almost always ate from there instead of attempting to get anything in the main pond because they could wade into the stream and have pretty easy pickings. $$ What stream? How long was the stream,? Herons do not want 1/2" fry or small crayfish. How did you keep mosquito fish in the stream and out of the pond itself? Loosing those kind of fish wasn't a big deal (although I suppose losing too many mosquito fish could be a problem in mosquito season, but it's easy to get more). $$ Mosquitoes do not breed in streams (moving water). I can't believe you managed to keep the fish in the stream for the herons, and out of your pond. Did you have a net at the end of the stream? How large were the mosquito fish? The only koi lost was due to human problems when a teen threw a stepping stone from the garden into the pond and it hit a koi. $$ Fortunately we don't have problems like that since we live out in the country. The stream served a second purpose too. It was planted with milfoil and other plants, so it acted as a vegetative filter. The whole stream had pretty good daylight exposure for plant growth while the actual pond was partially shaded. Actually, the only foreign species in the pond was a muskrat that kept trying to build its nest in the pump house. Watching the herons catch the fish in the stream added a nice natural touch I thought. $$ How did you keep the fish in the stream? And what about those of us who don't have $10,000+ to call in pond builders or don't have the space for huge streams? -- Carol.... the frugal ponder... "Eat Right, Exercise, Die Anyway." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
"Benign Vanilla" wrote in message ... "~ Windsong ~" P@P wrote in message ... ---- I think Kathy is just saying there are options that work. For example, by hooting, hollering, running, screaming, flapping my arms technique (patent pending) has worked very well. ## So you stand outside or have someone stand outside from sunup to sundown? We can't afford to pay someone to stay out there guarding our ponds 7 days a week. In summer we often go away for weekends. No fish loss from Heron so far. Your Heron and Kingfishers may be more persistent then mine. I have many ponds in yards around me, so maybe they just other, quieter sources of food. Either way, my solution has so far...worked very well. snip ## See above. We can't afford to hire a guard and we're not always home. When we are, we are not at the windows watching for fish predators. I would run out doing the screaming and flapping, with the 3 dogs no less - I wrote about it here several years ago. At first it worked. They'd stay away for a few days. Then, after awhile, a few weeks maybe, the herons would fly into nearby trees until I went back inside. Within 15 minutes they were fishing again. Yes, they were persistent. We often saw one fishing in the ponds while another was up in a nearby tree. Or one was behind the house fishing the kiddy pools. On one occasion there were three in our yard. ## How can they make an educated choice without hearing form those who tried these other methods and none worked long-term and why? Do you realize some people are blaming herons for taking fish when the problem is snakes or frogs? We need to ask them if these predators are also in their pond. I don't recall anyone asking them that question. Some people never see a snake but suddenly find a shed skin near their pond. We can't assume every missing fish ended up dinner for some heron. snip True that. Last year, one of our Koi disappeared, plants knocked over and a very racoon like scat was found on the edge of the pond. Dern Racoons. My neighbor even mentioned to me he saw a racoon walking down the street towards my house. He must have heard about the buffet. My fish will swim into your hand if you sit there, so they are certainly dinner options for animals. ## Because of the dogs raccoons don't come into our yard. We have them as well as deer, possums, skunks, red and blue fox, huge flocks of turkeys, hawks...... -- Carol.... the frugal ponder... "Eat Right, Exercise, Die Anyway." ~~~~~~~ }((((((o http://www.heartoftn.net/users/windsong/index.html ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
Cichlidiot wrote:
Here's a potentially radical idea. How about tolerating the birds and designing a way for them to gravitate towards the far more replaceable fish (and less emotionally attached) than the expensive koi? The best design I've seen so far is a deep, vertically flat sided pond fed by a long, shallow stream/waterfall at a public koi pond. The stream was Sounds good. teaming with mosquito fish, crayfish and occasionally goldfish fry. The herons almost always ate from there instead of attempting to get anything in the main pond because they could wade into the stream and have pretty easy pickings. Loosing those kind of fish wasn't a big deal (although I suppose losing too many mosquito fish could be a problem in mosquito season, but it's easy to get more). Not likely to be a problem. I've never seen mosquito larvae or even many mosquitos around my ponds. Koi and Goldfish are quite happy to eat them too. The only koi lost was due to human problems when a teen threw a stepping stone from the garden into the pond and it hit a koi. Remove stone, tie round teenager's neck, repeat... The stream served a second purpose too. It was planted with milfoil and other plants, so it acted as a vegetative filter. I've done that. It requires vigilance, though. That milfoil has a tendency to dam the whole stream. -- derek |
"Katra" wrote in message ... snip I suspect you'd be in no trouble at all. Your dog in your yard? Hardly a crime. Now, if you shot the bird and held it down for spot to kill, that might be an issue. That's kind of the way I look at it... ;-) Border collies are excellent guard dogs. snip I am not a lawyer. I don't play one on TV, and I didn't stay in a Holiday Inn Express last night. Dislaimers aside, I keep my dog well trained, and housed in a yard with gates, and locks, etc. If a critter makes it into my yard, and she kills it, I'd be unhappy about it, but que sera. This goes for neighbor's pets as well. If a cat wanders into my dog's space, and the dog nabs it (not that she could, she's a total wuss when it comes to cats) again I'd feel bad, but I would feel no obligation to the owner. -- BV Webporgmaster of iheartmypond.com http://www.iheartmypond.com I'll be leaning on the bus stop post. |
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