Starlings may have a bad reputation but just like other birds, they are looking for food, especially during the winter months when natural food is scarce. You can also feed your garden birds earlier in the day because starlings tend to eat later on. Our starling-proof feeders can be used throughout the year and will be enjoyed by smaller and more timid birds like robins and wrens, giving them a quiet feeding area. However, they provide a high level of deterrence. So can someone please please come up with a solution to the of how to give the smaller shy birds a fair deal!.None of our caged bird feeders are guaranteed to be 100 percent effective because hungry large birds and smaller individuals will take greater risks to reach the bird seed. Entertaining though it is to see their necks stretch out like elastic bands, sticking those bills through both sets of metal it's not quite what I had in mind. After a month there is still haif the bird cake left-good on the expenses sheet- and the only birds that can use it are "the boys". Now, don't get me wrong, I will still feed the crows, jackdaws, magpies and "my boys" (the starlings), they're all part of life's rich tapestry and great fun to watch but fair play, level field and all that. Many thanks for letting us know.Ībout a month ago I bought this feeder having read in your catalogue "rest assured that the small birds, not bigger ones or adult squirrels will get the best deal." great! Just what I wanted - something on which only tits, robins and finches could have the monopoly. These feeders are made to be very strong, and it shouldn't be showing any signs of fatigue just from holding the suet cakes, please get in touch so that we can look into getting the item returned to us for a quality assessment. We have not heard of starlings becoming trapped in this feeder before, they are very intelligent birds so this sort of occurrence in any feeder or feeder with a guardian is most unusual. Sorry to hear you were unhappy with the product. Given its only success is in deterring the jackdaws as much as it deters all smaller birds with exception of misadventuring starlings. Obviously the only recommendation I can give is to avoid the product. Barely used, it already appears fatigued with the strain of holding the two included suet cakes in winter weather. This feeder does not meet expectations, even if it were a safe execution of concept, I wouldn't see this product as representing value for money. This is because on a number of occasions exhausted, suffering starlings, trapped within the guardian have needed freeing. I bought this as gift for my mother whose garden is frequented by many jackdaws. The feeder and guardian seem very well-made (although it was much larger than I was expecting!) but given that I only bought it to keep off starlings and it doesn't do that, I can't in all honesty recommend it. The adults are bright enough to figure out how to get to the suet cake by hanging on the side and tipping it over until they can reach it, but the juvenile was small enough to get part-way inside and inexperienced enough to get wedged in. Luckily it hadn't been stuck there too long and I was able to free it without too much trouble, but it was clearly quite distressed. Unfortunately so far the only birds that have used the feeder are the starlings! Like a previous reviewer, I found a juvenile starling trapped in the guardian this morning. There's plenty of food for the starlings in my other feeders, so I wanted to provide something the smaller birds couldn't be bullied off by the starling gangs. until the starlings worked out how to hang off the fat-ball feeder, and now they finish off 6 suet balls in a day and don't let any of the other birds get a look-in!). I bought this suet feeder with guardian in the hopes of keeping the starlings off the suet balls (the sparrows used to love the buggy suet balls.
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