Sonic programmable bird repeller uses birds' own natural distress calls to create a "danger zone."
Version 1 repels: Pigeons, Starlings, Sparrows and Gulls Version 2 repels: Crows, Blackbirds, Grackles, Cormorants, Ravens Version WP repels: Woodpeckers Harmless. BirdXPeller PRO Sonic Bird Repeller uses natural sounds to chase away the birds, so it doesn't harm them.
Scaring Off Winged Pests with Sonic Bird Repellent Devices Welcome to the Kansas City Convention and Entertainment Centers. This city-operated complex consists of six buildings housing two million square feet of exhibit halls, meeting space, food service and entertainment venues. Thousands of visitors flock to the Centers every year. But at one time, thousands of starlings also flocked to the Kansas City Convention/Entertainment Centers. “Birds were everywhere,” explains Dean Barrett, Building Operations Manager, “ – in the trees, around the buildings, on the rooftops. The birds were out of control, and the sidewalks were a mess,” he continues and describes the frequent power washings necessary to remove the recurring bird droppings. View the complete story here. Sonic Bird Warning Device Keeps Sea Gulls Off Platform, Equipment Sea gulls regard offshore platforms as their personal showcases. They love to perch in the tall beams to survey the passing scene. Picturesque though gulls may be, their droppings make misery for maintenance workers. What to do? "We tried using owl decoys to scare the gulls away," says Doyle Savell, Measurement Supervisor for the Louisiana Land and Exploration Company in Lafayette, Louisiana. Owls are the natural enemies of gulls, so theory holds that a phony owl will fool the sea gulls and they'll fly away out of instinctive fear. Not true. View the complete story here. Chemcentral Solves Nesting and Droppings Problems with Sonic Blasts Imagine for a minute that you are a plant superintendent in an industrial setting. Your company’s product is considered volatile and flammable so, for safety, your warehouse needs to have an open dock. Your inventory is huge, occupying 70,000 square feet of plant floor space. Remember, the loading dock is open. Now picture this: It’s springtime and hundreds of birds are scouting Cincinnati for nesting sites. Aha – look at that inviting dock at Chemcentral! Up on the rafters and girders they gather – pigeons, robins and starlings, making themselves comfortable in the manmade shelter. “With the nesting came droppings, feces and eggs,” says William Spangler, Plant Superintendent at Chemcentral’s Cincinnati plant. “The floor looked like a mowed hayfield. We’d clean it up, and the next morning we’d face the same scene.” In short, Spangler says, day after day “it was a big pain.” Starlings were the most prevalent and the worst offenders, he adds. View the complete story here. View more case histories here.
Welcome to the Kansas City Convention and Entertainment Centers. This city-operated complex consists of six buildings housing two million square feet of exhibit halls, meeting space, food service and entertainment venues. Thousands of visitors flock to the Centers every year. But at one time, thousands of starlings also flocked to the Kansas City Convention/Entertainment Centers. “Birds were everywhere,” explains Dean Barrett, Building Operations Manager, “ – in the trees, around the buildings, on the rooftops. The birds were out of control, and the sidewalks were a mess,” he continues and describes the frequent power washings necessary to remove the recurring bird droppings. View the complete story here.
Sea gulls regard offshore platforms as their personal showcases. They love to perch in the tall beams to survey the passing scene. Picturesque though gulls may be, their droppings make misery for maintenance workers. What to do? "We tried using owl decoys to scare the gulls away," says Doyle Savell, Measurement Supervisor for the Louisiana Land and Exploration Company in Lafayette, Louisiana. Owls are the natural enemies of gulls, so theory holds that a phony owl will fool the sea gulls and they'll fly away out of instinctive fear. Not true. View the complete story here.
Imagine for a minute that you are a plant superintendent in an industrial setting. Your company’s product is considered volatile and flammable so, for safety, your warehouse needs to have an open dock. Your inventory is huge, occupying 70,000 square feet of plant floor space. Remember, the loading dock is open. Now picture this: It’s springtime and hundreds of birds are scouting Cincinnati for nesting sites. Aha – look at that inviting dock at Chemcentral! Up on the rafters and girders they gather – pigeons, robins and starlings, making themselves comfortable in the manmade shelter. “With the nesting came droppings, feces and eggs,” says William Spangler, Plant Superintendent at Chemcentral’s Cincinnati plant. “The floor looked like a mowed hayfield. We’d clean it up, and the next morning we’d face the same scene.” In short, Spangler says, day after day “it was a big pain.” Starlings were the most prevalent and the worst offenders, he adds. View the complete story here.
*Please see pdf file for full instructions with diagrams.
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"We live in an apartment on the East China Sea in Japan - barely a 1/2 mile from the water's edge and the pigeons love our balcony! This tape is...Read More ->