We have a neighbor who feeds all birds, we also have shops and take aways near us , but the gulls are awful they fight viciously with each other, we found the head of a gull in our front garden recently which leads us to believe we have foxes nearby , we live just outside of a main city ,the gulls are waking everyone up at 4am every morning , there are a few chicks about also , whats the best way to get rid of them?.
Surely people come before birds , I wouldn't harm them they're protected anyway . but there must be a way to deal with them . The germs they carry will affect humans obviously , that in itself is reason to do something .
They'll also congregate around landfill sites - rubbish created by humans - and are attracted to towns and cities where fast-food scraps are plentiful (more human-created trash).
@@FirstLast-fc6kg Their natural food sources are depleted - guess who by? Humans. On the other hand we provide them with an 'alternative' diet - junk leftovers from takeaways in the streets and tons of scraps at landfill sites. Once again, we are causing the situation.
We have a neighbor who feeds all birds, we also have shops and take aways near us , but the gulls are awful they fight viciously with each other, we found the head of a gull in our front garden recently which leads us to believe we have foxes nearby , we live just outside of a main city ,the gulls are waking everyone up at 4am every morning , there are a few chicks about also , whats the best way to get rid of them?.
YOU move to an underground bunker if thats your level of tolerance!! 😂
Surely people come before birds , I wouldn't harm them they're protected anyway . but there must be a way to deal with them . The germs they carry will affect humans obviously , that in itself is reason to do something .
What about the germs HUMANS carry? WE are a lot filthier! 😂
About to grab my rifle right now
The birds were there before you!!!
This is fine until they attack you physically.
If seagulls are around, chances are you're in a seaside location. If that's the case, just remember - they were there first.
They'll also congregate around landfill sites - rubbish created by humans - and are attracted to towns and cities where fast-food scraps are plentiful (more human-created trash).
I live 100 miles from the sea and this place is infested with them.
@@misc.endeavours8343 those things also attract rats but no one has a problem with them being controlled
@@FirstLast-fc6kg
Their natural food sources are depleted - guess who by? Humans. On the other hand we provide them with an 'alternative' diet - junk leftovers from takeaways in the streets and tons of scraps at landfill sites. Once again, we are causing the situation.
@@misc.endeavours8343 You’d think such things would lead to our urban areas being overrun by rats and mice. Guess why they aren’t.