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Posted

Hi all, after a little bit of advice, I planted a gage tree about 3 years ago, it’s grown very quickly and has never been trimmed. This time last year it was covered in blossom, which was quickly picked off by the local bullfinches.

This year every new bud has been pecked off by bullfinches and the blossom is only on a handful of very low twigs.

I’m thinking about taking some of the height out of the tree and I’ve read that this time of year is best to do it.

Any suggestions on how much to take off and anyone have any ideas to prevent further bullfinch damage?

I’m concerned that the bullfinches will move onto the plums, apples and pears planted in the same area.

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Posted
  On 01/04/2021 at 18:46, gary112 said:

Got one but don,t get Bullfinches unfortunately

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Well at least you get plums - my blossom gets taken by the pigeons and I would rather have plums than pigeons.

 

Alec

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Posted
  On 01/04/2021 at 18:00, Patrick goulding said:
You could apply to natural England for a individual licence to control the bullfinches. 
 
if that fails you could put a net over the tree or hang some cds [emoji331] by some string in the trees to scare or try some rope bangers. or buy a decoy owl or hawk put it on a post round your trees that might work. [emoji106] 


Unfortunately I don’t think natural England licences will be valid in Scotland [emoji23]

Our resident kestrel, owls and cats don’t phase the finches, so decoys are probably not an option.

Thinking about the netting option [emoji1303]
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Posted
  On 01/04/2021 at 18:04, Stubby said:
Net the tree and put some feeders up with crushed sunflower hearts in  away from the tree . Best of both worlds .


Sounds like a good idea, I’ll give the sunflower hearts a go [emoji1303]
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Posted

For much later in the year they love the seed heads of Geranium phaeum should you have a few square yards in which you can let it naturalise

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Posted

No worries. The only trouble is other species of birds what aren’t being a pest have a high chance of getting stuck on the netting. And dieing the net has to be checked regular. I still don’t think it would be a bad idea to have a plastic decoy to scare. 👍 

18F6CE64-4CDE-4394-AE8A-B8B823FB4A02.png

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Posted
  On 01/04/2021 at 20:10, Gav73 said:

 


Unfortunately I don’t think natural England licences will be valid in Scotland emoji23.png

Our resident kestrel, owls and cats don’t phase the finches, so decoys are probably not an option.

Thinking about the netting option emoji1303.png

 

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Regards to natural England I don’t think they could tell you what a bullfinch was 😂 👍 

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