I had 4 raccoons in my back yard. I got a cheap cage trap from tractor supply and caught 3 and drove them 10 miles away and released them in the woods. The 4th one saw his buddies being trapped and I haven't seen him/her since. That was 4 months ago. All I have now is one opossum. Caught him/her twice in the cage but let him go in the back yard. He's not afraid to being trapped it seems. He is a very picky eater the only thing he likes is Apple Crush deer feed and marshmallows. I buy it just for him because he/she is such a nice opossum.
My hummingbird feeders are on my deck and too high for the squirrels, but they were constantly going after my regular bird feeders, which are on poles and Shepard hooks in the yard. So I bought a little wooden open feeder and stocked it with peanuts and other nuts, sunflower seeds, and sometimes dried fruits ... and I placed it just a few inches from the ground. The squirrels love it, and as long as I keep it stocked they don't even bother trying to get to the bird feeders anymore.... although I have seen the Cardinals and Bluejays at the squirrel feeder.
After years and years of battling squirrels and raccoons on my hummingbird feeders, and regular bird feeders, I discovered a simple solution to them. I have tried most of the things other folks do, slinkies, ballasts, metal skirts, metal sleeves over the poles, even electrics. I took a couple rollers out of a discarded treadmill, that spun freely on their bearings, with a 17mm axle inside. I fabbed a half inch thick aluminum bracket I could screw to the 4X4 post, secure one end of the axle in that bracket, and hang the feeder on the opposite end of the axle. The roller between the bracket and feeder will spin critters off it. Squirrels can jump that distance, but the feeder is "squirrel proof", it is spring loaded and closes up with anything greater than a bird's weight is on it. I am cautiously optimistic on this solution, as it has worked famously.... so far, both for the hummingbird feeder, and the bird feeder. But these guys are crafty little engineers. Time will tell. (I do have videos on how those rollers were mounted)
I'm surprised you didn't go into detail about the baffles. I have a 2 ft wobbling PVC baffle on my bird feeder pole. My brother set the feeders up and raccoons showed up. Woke up one morning to find the entire feeder pole on the ground. Need to secure that pole better. They obviously found the way to get around the baffle was knock the entire pole over.
There are a lot of baffles on the market and most of them are too small to keep raccoons from climbing over them. They need to be long enough that they can not reach over them. The best ones, we call them the "stove pipes", are the most effective.
@@MarksBackyardBirds I've had these 4" wobbling PVC baffles for years on nest boxes and they've done the job. However I do have interest in upgrading to the stovepipe. My brother needed to drive the bird feeder pole further into the ground. It was obviously way too loose. I was not expecting to see the entire poll and feeder on the ground in the morning.
I had this exact issue last week as well. In the past, the little bandits, have dragged the entire feeder off into the woods for me to find months later. Taking mine down at night until I sort out a better solution.
@@phoenixspirit9530 I have a customer who started putting her hummingbird and oriole feeder in her gas grill at night instead of bringing them into the house. Works.
@@MarksBackyardBirds haha...I know me and I'd somehow manage to get my feeders melted. Ruining both the feeders and grill in the process. I bring them into my hallway and place in a Rubbermaid tote with a lid or put them in a metal trash can with a lid (bungee corded) on inside the out building. If I happen to forget about them, no danger. My raccoons are after the black oil sunflower seeds and apparently my strawberry and tomato plants. They haven't messed with the Oriole feeders or the hummingbird feeders ( yet).
@@MarksBackyardBirds Yes Mark, the Skunks started making my backyard smell sometimes. I'm still a fan of you and your channel, and still go sometimes to the woods near my house to handfeed Chickadees, and different other birds. They struggle hard here in quebec winter.
Thanks for sharing the info. I recently started to notice something other than squirrels were are at my feeders. My suet block was removed from its cage and completely desolved over night. I also leave a large bowl of water out which was emptied by morning - that is unusual for the birds (and squirrels). The feeders were also shaken, as there were several seeds on the ground. The squirrels don't do that. So my assumption is it must be racoons.
Yes it is definitely raccoons and/or possums. I've been noticing the EXACT same issue, not only was suet block gone fast, but the cage was opened and they broke the chain for the holder! So I made sure I woke up and checked in the middle of the night last night, I caught several raccoons, and a possum between several checks. I even saw one raccoon yell at some other raccoons that he didn't feel like sharing with! I knew the squirrels couldn't eat THAT much!!
I know this is about bird feeders. Now PLEASE SHARE THIS ASAP. Contact an electrician with the guidance of wild life. Get an electrical wire installed around the entire roof. Not too high or too low. The raccoons get shocked and never come back. Every home owner needs to get this done. Germany does it. The raccoons don't make it across the roof. They will never make it in the attic.
I don’t know how to explain the spot I have my bird feeder but it hangs in front of a window I can watch but there’s no ledge just straight wall and drop off where I can put a screw and hang it and it’s like 5 foot plus 5 for a small little thing like a raccoon if it really is that hungry and wants it.
They certainly can be dangerous if cornered. They typically do not attack animals but when cornered by a dog, they can do some serious damage with their claws and teeth. They can carry rabies and distemper. I always turn the lights on and make noise to give them to run off if I’m going to let my dog out in the yard at night.