We have a problem with crows being overpopulated in South
Orange County. They are rather intelligent birds and work in family groups. Crows
can be noisy, aggressive and I believe they recognize human faces as
individuals. I have an organic garden that I don't want them stealing produce and I don't want to use chemicals. Here are some strategies to deal with
these guys.
I have a neighbor in Wyoming who decided to try and shoot at
them (not actually hunt them) to scare them off his property but this action brought
the wrath of the crows. First they proceeded to poop on his truck at every
opportunity, then they would scream before dawn on his roof. They even tore the
rubber lining off his front pickup truck windshield (pecked at the whole lining
until the glass would rattle). I believe it is illegal to hunt crows in residential neighborhoods of Orange County. They are protected as migratory corvids.
The crows pull up lawns in Laguna Beach and Laguna Niguel
during the Fall months looking for these white moth larvae. The damage is
pretty ugly and no amount of lawn poison seems to kill off the grubs that
attract the birds to come rip panels of grass up. I read that the grubs do not
like clover so my lawn in the front is now predominantly three kinds of clover
(red white and pink). Planting the variety keeps the lawn green year round.
When I saw the damage this year the crows were starting on
my neighbors lawns I decided to take a new attitude and befriend the crows
rather than shoo them away. For a week I took the heel of a loaf of bread, some
peanuts, or sunflower seeds and randomly tossed them in a very showy gesture
not at the crows but on my driveway. Then I waited and did my weeding. They
were very suspicious of me at first. The first two days the birds did not come
down until I went back into the house. On the third day the largest bird hopped
down waiting for me to spin the food into the air and called his buddies to
join in the meal. Now three weeks later I feed them randomly twice a week, and
they have left us alone.
Maybe making peace is easier than prevention. In the
photograph is an apple and a persimmon tree that a neighbor is using brown
grocery bags and paper clips to keep the crows away from stealing the fruit. Perhaps
it’s also to keep the south side from sunburn, we’ll see if it works. Don’t
start calling me Tippi Hedren...
Update to story 4/9/2013 here: http://cgbarbeau.blogspot.com/2013/04/peace-with-crows.html more to follow
Update to story 4/9/2013 here: http://cgbarbeau.blogspot.com/2013/04/peace-with-crows.html more to follow