A two stack (12 room) castle missing half its doors (one of which open compartments hosted a martin nest), full of sparrows except for two pairs of martins (no photo).
A leaning Carrol pole supporting a three stack castle with the roof bent up and half blown-off (one pair of martins).

..and, right behind the dumpster, a 24 room castle barely ten feet off of the ground...

Turns out the houses were originally put up some years back by a retired gentleman in a nearby residence who, last I heard, was in poor health.
These three house have suffered neglect for at least a few years.
It would be no trouble at all for me to toss out the sparrows once a week if I could lower the housing. They sit barely ten feet off of the ground, maybe too low for starlings in this busy location.
With the first Trio, the 12 roomer missing half its doors, I did this already. I wish I would have thought to take a photo of the martin nest in the doorless compartment, it was an ASY pair from last year. I don't know if they fledged any young. I did find a stone in one doorless compartment.
The Carrol telescoping pole had been left up for so long I was unable to budge the pole sections at all. I know carrol poles real well and will bring supplies to work on this next week.
The big Trio castle is more of a puzzle. I have never worked one before. The steel cable look sound with a bit of surface rust. I see the cable that pulls it down, how does it go back up? Is it counterweighted inside?
Also, how do I operate the crank?

This one's a tad out of focus


Worse case scenario, I lower it and it wont go back up by the cable, but if that happens I figure I can just push it back up with a pole from underneath and hold it in place any number of ways.
Mind boggling that these maybe fifteen ASY martins come back clear from South America every year to this neglected location.
Mike Scully
