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JohnMParticipant
We’ve had several birds fly into our 2nd story widow. The window is ~ 4’H x 3’W. During the day the window ‘mirrors’ the sky and the birds think the window is a continuation of the sky. Our solution was to place a wind sock in front of the window. The sock is a multi-colored fish design that looks attractive and, so far, has kept birds from flying into the window. The windsock was purchased from Amazon: “In the Breeze 60″ Rainbow Scales Fish Windsock”. Cost was ~ $20.
JohnM
rswheeler1ParticipantWe’ve never had a hawk fly into a window, but we did have a band-tailed pigeon do it. It left a perfect image on the window.
dhumphParticipantWoke up this AM and discovered a dead hawk on the backside of our cabin. The body doesn’t look as if it’s been attacked. It is about 5 feet from the cabin and directly across from a window. Has anyone else had a hawk fly into a window? We are concerned about disease? We’ve had some smaller birds hit a window but not something this big.
allenParticipantFound some info here:
http://www.foothillpest.com/technical-pages/insects-and-related-pests/pine-tree-ants/Dave and NancyParticipantMaybe they are coming in through the service conduits…
bigtreestechmanKeymasterThanks Kuma, all our power, cable and phone come in underground… good investment by original builder / owner.
KumaParticipantyou may need to check overhead wires. If I recall right my Sister had issues and they found them using the phone lines from above and getting into her place that way
bigtreestechmanKeymasterHave you ever had to deal with an infestation of pine ants (not carpenter ants). They look like regular small black ants, but have a potent pine smell when squished. From what I’ve read, they like to nest in the foam insulation commonly used in open beam ceilings.
Even though we have Clark Pest Control come out and spray regularly, somehow these nasty critters found a way in. What a PITA!allenParticipantGreat video Sandi! Thought for sure were going to crash going that fast! 🙂
Yesterday my wife and I made a “quick” dump run. I didn’t even think about driving fast. Stupid me!
- This reply was modified 10 years, 11 months ago by allen.
allenParticipant@phabib – That sounds about right. Since access to ours is under ground, we’ll probably wait until it becomes a necessity and then have risers with lids put on at the same time we have it pumped.
phabibParticipantI read up on septic systems when I installed mine and what I learned was that the tank stratifies into 3 layers. The top layer is being worked on, the middle stuff has finished anaerobic digestion and moves into the second chamber of the tank in two chamber tanks, or into the leach field. The stuff that can’t be digested falls to the bottom and builds up.
When the build up gets to be too much, its time to pump it out and dispose of it.
In our case with a 1500 gallon tank the design life between pumpings was about 10 years.
You can probably extrapolate from there. The book mentioned that you could poke a stick into the muck and judge how thick the bottom layer is too, but I don’t remember how thick it was allowed to get.
cmon4dayParticipantSandi,
That was cool. Thanks for sharing. You were going so fast how did you not skid out on the turns :}
SandiParticipantCathieParticipantSweet Pea Septic is great: http://www.sweetpeaseptic.com
Also, every 5 years you should have your septic checked.
itsleahParticipantVery cool! Thanks for sharing!
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