Robobird and those pesky seagulls

Warrigal

SF VIP
I have an irrational affection for bushrangers that leads me to feel warmly about seagulls. And pigeons.
However tourists don't always feel the same.

How should the problem of thieving seagulls be addressed?

The dining companions no one wants - Sydney's hungry seagulls

Date September 20, 2014
Rachel Browne


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Out of control: Seagulls divebomb patrons at the Sydney Opera House. Photo: Louise Kennerley

They are the unwanted dining companions which have Sydney restaurateurs and their patrons in a flap.

So rapacious are the gulls at the Sydney Opera House's dining precinct, management is trialling different deterrents including a giant mechanical bird of prey they say has a $6500 price tag.
The robo-bird bears a striking resemblance to the $16,000 mechanical falcons installed by Scotland's Network Rail to scare gulls and pigeons away from Edinburgh's main train station.

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The ineffective deterrent.

A spokeswoman for the Opera House confirmed a number of different deterrents were being explored, adding that the silver seagull is a native species protected under the National Parks and Wildlife Act so setting baits is not an option.

"Our venue operators and the Opera House have trialled other additional measures on an ad-hoc basis, including kites that resembled owls and an audio deterrent," the spokeswoman said. "None, including the mock bird of prey, has proved very effective."

From the Sydney Fish Market, to Circular Quay, the Opera House and Bondi Beach, Sydney's seagulls are showing no regard for table manners, brazenly stealing food from plates as diners head outside to eat in the spring sunshine.
Hollywood starlet Hilary Duff discovered just how aggressive the birds can be when she was dive-bombed by seagulls while eating chips and salad outside the Opera House earlier this month.

The Fish Market has also tried a variety of measures to keep the gulls at bay, including $1500 in laser lighting and artificial predatory birds. "Unfortunately the seagulls become accustomed to these kind of tactics so they are only ever a short-term fix," a spokeswoman said.

Management has installed signs in multiple languages advising patrons not to feed the birds and garbage bins with spring-loaded lids to prevent scavenging. "We have been advised that the best way to manage them is to take away the food source but, being a waterfront dining destination and a fish market, completely removing the food source is not an option," she said. "All we can do is try and limit the birds' access to food."

Australian Museum ornithologist Dr Richard Major said seagulls were opportunistic feeders with no scruples about their food source.

"Seagulls are classic scavengers," he said. "They will congregate wherever there is a food source – it doesn't matter if it's a rubbish tip or a fine-dining restaurant. They're doing very well with people because we tend to leave a lot of food scraps lying around for them."

As for dissuading them from sharing your meal at an al fresco restaurant, he recommends low-tech tactics.
"Other than removing the food source, the most effective deterrent is waving your hands and shooing them away," he said.
How do you feel about sharing your dinner with cheeky seagulls, pigeons, ibis, swans, pelicans and emus?
From that list I'm only worried about swans and emus. It must be the long necks :lol:
 

It's feeding pigeons that are a problem here. Your question reminded me of the "long-necked geese" in the "Unicorn" song.
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great cartoon! When we lived in a small Devon seaside town a few years ago,the council were getting fed up with vandals littering fish and chips and wrappings all along the quayside at night, so installed a CCTV camera at a few locations.Yes, you've guessed it; the vandals were seagulls [the council hadn't guessed it though.] One bird was hopping up on the metal litter bins and pushing it's body against the lid, while others took it in turns to fly up and pull out the parcels of unwanted fish and chips. When they had enough on the ground they all tucked in.Much heavier lids on the bins proved the answer, though I did feel a twinge of regret for the loss of the birds fish suppers.
 

great cartoon! When we lived in a small Devon seaside town a few years ago,the council were getting fed up with vandals littering fish and chips and wrappings all along the quayside at night, so installed a CCTV camera at a few locations.Yes, you've guessed it; the vandals were seagulls [the council hadn't guessed it though.] One bird was hopping up on the metal litter bins and pushing it's body against the lid, while others took it in turns to fly up and pull out the parcels of unwanted fish and chips. When they had enough on the ground they all tucked in.Much heavier lids on the bins proved the answer, though I did feel a twinge of regret for the loss of the birds fish suppers.

We've had the same behaviour from crows. After the kids had put all their rubbish in the bin at a sports oval where we were having a sports carnival, crows came down and threw lots of it all over the place looking for titbits. We had to send a cleanup squad back to avoid being accused of being irresponsible users of the grounds.
 
Your question reminded me of the "long-necked geese" in the "Unicorn" song.
Geese don't worry me because I've learned to stop them in their tracks when they are rushing at you. You turn to face them , put your hands on your hips, lean forward from the waist and stick your chin out. You can hiss too if you want to. The geese think that you are a really big goose. So do everyone else that sees you do it, but the geese don't keep chasing you.

It does work. We had to resort to this tactic on Norfolk island where the geese and cattle roam free.
 
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Geese don't worry me because I've learned to stop them in their tracks when they are rushing at you. You turn to face them , put your hands on your hips lean forward from the waist and stick your chin out. You can his too if you want to. The geese think that you are a really big goose. So do everyone else that sees you do it, but the geese don't keep chasing you.

It does work. We had to resort to this tactic on Norfolk island where the geese and cattle roam free.

We have crows as well, and with the corn in full growth, they have a feast daily. There are a half a dozen (attempted murder?) who hang around. They bob their heads, 3 times then they let out with 3 caws, and I like to bob my head and crow back. I don't know what they think. I don't have much of a human audience.:)

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Geese don't worry me because I've learned to stop them in their tracks when they are rushing at you. You turn to face them , put your hands on your hips lean forward from the waist and stick your chin out. You can his too if you want to. The geese think that you are a really big goose. So do everyone else that sees you do it, but the geese don't keep chasing you.

It does work. We had to resort to this tactic on Norfolk island where the geese and cattle roam free.
Thanks for this handy tip, I shall try it the next time I have to go near geese and they turn hostile.
 

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