Has anyone ever found an effective gull deterrent for yachts?

We use pea netting. One piece strung along the boom to protect the sail cover and another on the afterdeck (Moody 346) to stop the little shites shitting on the hatch.

Very successful
Donald
 
Tie thin thread or cord between the shrouds so it is just above the spreaders, say 50mm, this will deter them sitting there, you should be able to leave it there permanently. I thought if its really thin they cannot see it and so when they touch it they scare and cannot take off easily. This works just above the boom as well, similarly along the top of the stanchions - but it needs dedication to install and remove every time you sail.

Our neighbour has a recording of an eagle's nest, which is exceptionally tedious, but does keep their and our yacht relatively clear - but we also installed bunting.

Owls seem to be a waste of time, those rotating devices, mentioned above, do see to work, but leave gaps.

They are creatures of habit so the more often you are on the yacht the more likely they are to find somewhere that has no disturbances. They get used to stationary deterrents, like snakes and owls


Buy a cat? - which surely is the answer for the oil rig?

Jonathan
 
Buy a cat? - which surely is the answer for the oil rig?

Every cat I've observed has been scared stuff of herring gulls, the main culprit in N Europe, and with good reason. Herring gulls are about the same size as your kelp gull and often quite aggressive, especially if accustomed to people, as harbour gulls generally are.

Unless, of course you were suggesting cats could intercept incoming poo, which I think would ask rather a lot of even their famous agility - not to mention their fondness for napping ;)
 
Tried all sorts over the past 25 years. Gullsweep is good, netting is the most effective, nothing else works, apart from spikes,
 
We use pea netting. One piece strung along the boom to protect the sail cover and another on the afterdeck (Moody 346) to stop the little shites shitting on the hatch.

Very successful
Donald

+1 I had several years moored on a drying mooring in Whitby. The grokels kept feeding the seagulls which shat all over my decks. I got some sweat pea netting and used some piston hanks from a retired sail to make it easy to clip over the decks. Worked like a charm but a bit of a hassle getting it on and off every trip.
 
I was tied up in Penryn, and the chap alongside, (How do Jeremy on the Nimbus, if you read this :encouragement:)
had a hawk/predator kite, it was weirdly realistic, you keep glancing at it, even when you know it's a kite. Uncanny.
No guano anyway. Got to be worth a try.
 

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Thought of the falcon kite idea, but we've got a Yacht and on a swinging mooring it would just get caught in the rigging when the wind blows up the jaxi.

Haven't had them on the spreaders to date, thankfully.

It's not just gulls, BTW. We have also had wagtails adopt us, coming in to roost under the sprayhood at dusk, or, worse still, in the end of the stackpack. Delightful to look at, the little buggers crap all over everything. Had to tie down the end of the stack pack to deny them entry. Result: our companionway hatch is peppered, along with all the area under the sprayhood.

I think we need to move aboard and live there. They never seem to come when we are there. Now, that's a good idea....
 
It's not just gulls, BTW. We have also had wagtails adopt us, coming in to roost under the sprayhood at dusk, or, worse still, in the end of the stackpack. Delightful to look at, the little buggers crap all over everything. Had to tie down the end of the stack pack to deny them entry. Result: our companionway hatch is peppered, along with all the area under the sprayhood.

Perhaps roosting pockets would work by containing the guano...

Mike.
 
What do you do when a bird craps on your deck?

... don't invite her out again!

(to paraphrase a birthday card I bought recently) ?
 
Owls and other plastic decorations don't work at all. The gulls are far too smart for that. They do hate anything touching them though, so the Gullsweep or above mentioned "Daddy long legs" work, but only in the area they sweep - you'll find a gull quite happily perching right next to one where it can't hit it.

The only thing the herring gulls here are truly respecting are the bigger, meaner versions of themselves, the great black-backed gulls, which in turn are afraid of nothing and nobody and will happily take on an osprey: http://www.arkive.org/great-black-backed-gull/larus-marinus/video-00.html

The best method to keep herring gulls away seems to be living on your boat - they only go to the many rarely used boats here. Never feed them anywhere near your boat and tell others not to do so either. They also do love freshwater baths, so never let a puddle of rainwater sit in your dinghy or pooling in a sagging canvas cover.

Now if anyone has an effective cure for starlings...
 
Didn't b****y work, though; the crow has just flown off with yet another 90g fat block...

Mike.

The way to deal with the crow nicking fat blocks is to embedded some large fishing hooks on lines in the block and tie the line off to the feeder. The crow won't be able to take the block away and the smaller birds will eat round the hooks. Alternatively, put the block inside a mesh bag and suspend it from the feeder: tits and other small birds will be able to perch on it to feed whereas the crow won't be able to.
 
Here in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, someone mentioned the other day that you don't get seagulls shitting all over the pontoons and boats. You see them flying over, occasionally.
So nthere's your answer--- move the boat to the Canaries!
 
Here in Las Palmas, Gran Canaria, someone mentioned the other day that you don't get seagulls shitting all over the pontoons and boats. You see them flying over, occasionally.
So nthere's your answer--- move the boat to the Canaries!

Graham take note :) :) :)
 
The way to deal with the crow nicking fat blocks is to embedded some large fishing hooks on lines in the block and tie the line off to the feeder. The crow won't be able to take the block away and the smaller birds will eat round the hooks. Alternatively, put the block inside a mesh bag and suspend it from the feeder: tits and other small birds will be able to perch on it to feed whereas the crow won't be able to.

Thanks, I shall try something like that. Maybe using bungee, for entertainment! It's a very new phenomenon...

Mike.
 
Thought of the falcon kite idea, but we've got a Yacht and on a swinging mooring it would just get caught in the rigging when the wind blows up the jaxi.

Haven't had them on the spreaders to date, thankfully.

It's not just gulls, BTW. We have also had wagtails adopt us, coming in to roost under the sprayhood at dusk, or, worse still, in the end of the stackpack. Delightful to look at, the little buggers crap all over everything. Had to tie down the end of the stack pack to deny them entry. Result: our companionway hatch is peppered, along with all the area under the sprayhood.

I think we need to move aboard and live there. They never seem to come when we are there. Now, that's a good idea....


Be grateful you don't have swarms of Starlings overhead after they've just lunched on Blackberries from the nearby hedgerows :(
 
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