Thank you sir. Hope to see them this weekend. it'll be 60s today but lows at night for the next 2 weeks will still be in the mid to high 30s :( Can they tolerate that? I guess the question should be will the insects be out in those temps..?
From what I've been able to learn so far, nighttime lows in the mid- to high-30s shouldn't be a big issue if they're able to eat well during the day and keep their energy level up. Several rainy days in a row where insects are not in the air, coupled with cold nights, could be a problem, however. Be prepared to offer supplemental feeding, if weather conditions go bad after the birds arrive.
2016 - 6 cavities in Royal Wing/S&K house + 6 BO9 gourds with tunnels/porches on pole 1, 6 BO9 gourds with tunnels/porches on pole 2
2015 - new homebuilt 3 cavity house plus 3 BO9 gourds with tunnels porches on second pole, in addition to prior setup. 15 pairs, 54 fledged
2014 - 6 6x12 house cavities (plastic Royal Wing/S&K), plus 6 BO9 gourds with tunnels/porches offered; 12 pairs, 50 fledged
kehunter wrote:From what I've been able to learn so far, nighttime lows in the mid- to high-30s shouldn't be a big issue if they're able to eat well during the day and keep their energy level up. Several rainy days in a row where insects are not in the air, coupled with cold nights, could be a problem, however. Be prepared to offer supplemental feeding, if weather conditions go bad after the birds arrive.
That's good to know. Thanks. I have a tray and food ready.
mike, I am a she. and what kehunter said is correct. just be ready to try to feed them. putting them in the gourds or on the porches works good. and I had to use crickets first then went to mealworms. good luck.
chickadee wrote:mike, I am a she. and what kehunter said is correct. just be ready to try to feed them. putting them in the gourds or on the porches works good. and I had to use crickets first then went to mealworms. good luck.
Ooops Sorry Mam. Ill make sure Ill be ready in case there more of this cold spells/non stop rain in our area. I do have meal worms that Ive been feeding the blue birds with.
Martin Colony History: Started in 1992 From neighbors old 1950-60's colonies. Have 8 Trio 6 Room Houses, 4 MPP Poles, 1 Heath Deluxe Gourd with Troyer Porch, 8 NatureLine Gourds with Troyer Porches, 5 Troyer Horizontals ,& 2 S&K 11" WITH Troyer Porches ready for 2019 Season !
Joez wrote:Would it be possible to show a closeup of how your pulley system locks the sliding part onto the top of the pole?
Im not sure if your asking if the weight of the rack is held locked once its up.. Answer to that is NO. Its held by the Dacron rope in up position.
What locks is the slider/rack from spinning around with the wind since its round pipe. Here's pix of that Once the sliding pipe gets up there, it has a notch that catches a bolt.
The bolt head side is where the pulley is so it could get over the head. I actually had to file the bolt head a little bit 'cause it was getting stuck coming down. The little chamfer/angle I filed made it snag free.
Last edited by Carrera Mike on Sat Mar 22, 2014 9:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
Martin Colony History: Started in 1992 From neighbors old 1950-60's colonies. Have 8 Trio 6 Room Houses, 4 MPP Poles, 1 Heath Deluxe Gourd with Troyer Porch, 8 NatureLine Gourds with Troyer Porches, 5 Troyer Horizontals ,& 2 S&K 11" WITH Troyer Porches ready for 2019 Season !
Anthony Neira wrote:Sorry Mike, my gnat brain might have missed this, but why the lower pully ?
Tony,
no worries. Im using the compound pulley principle .. google might be able to explain that better than I could, but the basic of it is, it drastically lighten the effort to pull the rack up. Others even use the double pulley, two on top and two in the bottom.