🦅 Scare Away the Competition with Style!
The YOFIT Bird Scarecrow Fake Horned Hawk Decoy is a 15.7-inch tall, eco-friendly bird repellent designed to protect your garden and outdoor spaces. Made from durable molded plastic, this realistic hawk decoy effectively deters birds by mimicking their natural predator. Weigh it down with sand for stability and reposition it regularly to maintain its effectiveness. Ideal for both indoor and outdoor use, this humane solution ensures your garden remains a sanctuary.
Brand | yofit |
Style | Repellent |
Material | Plastic |
Item Weight | 0.75 Pounds |
Number of Pieces | 1 |
Recommended Uses For Product | Outdoor, Indoor |
Is Electric | No |
Target Species | Bird |
Manufacturer | YOFIT |
Product Dimensions | 39.88 x 17.02 x 17.02 cm; 340.19 g |
ASIN | B01IXTAN74 |
C**Y
Nice materials
Looks good ,does the job
P**R
No me sirvió de nada
No asusta... inclusive los pájaros conviven con la figura.
L**R
Beautiful but too light
This is very light and the wind kept tossing it around the balcony where I used it to scare away birds. I ended up giving it away as a gift. Otherwise, beautiful item.
J**B
Highly ineffective for Indian minor birds
We bought this to stop birds eating our dog food during the day when we’re at work. Birds were wary for about 1 hr. Totally ignored it since then, waste of money.
C**G
A Bird of Prey of My Very Own!
It was a super hot summer this year and my wife and I don't have an air conditioner in our bedroom. We never have. The kids have them in their rooms, but we don't because my wife tends to get cold easily. I avoided putting one in our room because I was concerned that I'd crank it way down and then she'd get up in the middle of the night and turn it off. Then, of course, I'd inevitably wake up hot as hell and angry. Better to just not have one and avoid a fight with the woman of my dreams.The first thing I do every day when I wake up is to open the curtains to look outside on the street. We live in a big city, so you never know what you'll see when you stand there in your undies looking outside. And yes, you read that correctly: she closes the curtains to make it dark at night. So there's not a lotta air flow. This one particular morning, I woke up and pulled my head off the soaking wet sponge that I formerly called a pillow and opened the curtain. To my surprise, I heard a weird fluttering sound I hadn't ever heard outside of my window. There were two pigeons that I had surprised when I opened the curtain and they circled back and stubbornly planted themselves right back on the window ledge. I had heard from a neighbor that you don't want them nesting and getting used to hanging out near your window because they will possibly nest and make noise and generally be a nuisance.I'm an old school guy, you know? I walk around my big city and I see how some of the bigger buildings deal with this problem. You see long rows of spikes tacked onto ledges of roofs and other edges of the apartment buildings. That's what I needed, I thought. So I went to my local hardware store and asked about these spiky strips. The kid at the store laughed at me a little and said, "No, no... those are illegal now. You can't get em. I can't sell them to you." I was confused. I thought maybe I was supposed to slip him five bucks and say, "But NOW you can sell em to me, right??" But before I could bribe the kid, he said, "You should buy those little plastic strips that reflect light. The birds hate those." Unfortunately he didn't have any in stock.So I went home and checked Amazon. I found those reflector strips the kid recommended, but all the reviews seemed the same... I'm paraphrasing about 300 negative reviews into one basic, common review: "These things work, but they're annoying as hell and make a racket outside, but the birds really don't like em!" I didn't want to install these outside my bedroom window for obvious reasons, so I kept scanning Amazon.Luckily, I found this YOFIT Fake Plastic Hawk that seemed to be very highly reviewed. And let me assure you, good old Huxley Hawk has really done the trick. Those freaking pigeons are ALL OVER the neighbors' houses. Not mine. They are obviously afraid of Huxley Hawk. How did we come up with the name for our fake plastic bird of prey, you ask? Easy. It had to be an H name for the benefit of alliteration of course. We settled on Huxley because it is of English origin meaning "inhospitable place." So Huxley Hawk sort of exists to create an inhospitable place for these dirty city pigeons.I highly recommend this product and even though it's advised that you rotate the bird to different places and inside sometime, I have never moved Huxley once. He's always right there and the pigeons poop themselves when they see him. I think pigeons are maybe dumb? I don't know. One thing to note, however: they don't provide you with rocks or sand or anything to weigh Huxley down so he can weather the wind and rain and other elements. I don't just have sand lying around so I took these rubber medical gloves we have and filled like 7 of them with water and shoved them into Huxley's body. Dude hasn't moved an inch and guards our building like the good soldier that he is.Last thing to mention here is that I've caught a few amateur birders snapping pics of Huxley. These old timers think he's real! The first time it happened, I was walking my dog down the block and some older woman had her phone out pointed at my house! I didn't understand why she'd be taking a photo of my house when I knew I wasn't up in the bedroom window with just my underwear on. What other reason?? And then I remembered Huxley... she saw that I was going into my house and she put a finger to her lips telling me to be quiet. "There's a hawk up there!" she whispered. I just giggled and clapped my hands as loud as I could. Then I did it again and again... Huxley obviously never moved. She looked at me strange and I said, "I guess he's dead!"
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