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Eric
Geese are not a problem in Southern California, but sea gulls are. A number of cities have used monofilament line in an effort to deter the gulls, with varying degrees success. A specific example would be the City of Avalon which is located on Santa Catalina Island. I don't know the cost, but you could contact the city for details.
Eric Edwards R.E.H.S. Chief Environmental Health Specialist County of Los Angeles Department of Public Health Water Quality Program 626-430-5420 eedwards@ph.lacounty.gov>>> Elizabeth Alm <alm1ew@cmich.edu> 11/27/2007 9 19 >>> Apparently, from my conversations with a number of gull/geese deterrent experts, gull and geese deterrent strategies may need to be quite different. Geese are rather skittish and can be chased away relatively easily and will then tend to stay away, but gulls are much more persistent and harassment techniques must be consistent and protracted. Liz
Eric: My involvement with this network evolved from the Blue Flag designation at Wasaga Beach Provincial Park in Ontario. Your question about gull wiring at beaches reminded me of a recent presentation I attended that was given by Scott Thomas, Superintendent at Six Mile Provincial Park in Ontario. I checked with Scott to see if he had any written reports or an update that I could share. There isn’t a report but Scott did share the following: At Six Mile Provincial Park, a “net” type product like monofilament was not used as the issues related to geese and they tend to not fly onto the beach but instead land on the water and swim in to the beach area. Tactics comprised of motion activated sprinklers (with signage) during shoulder season only, staff “harassment” by driving Gators on the beach areas etc., hanging coveralls from trees, and professional goose control canine performing random visits. Of course campers on the beach are a deterrent in high use times. The results from these activities included:
- No closed beach days which is a reduction from 2 to 4 bad water quality samples annually that resulted in closed beaches.
- No written complaints from park users which is a significant reduction from dozens of written complaints in previous years.
In conclusion, although there is no one technique that appeared to work best; this combination of approaches has proven to be successful in deterring geese from the beaches at Six Mile Provincial Park. Generally the trick was to create an unwelcoming and unsettling environment which contributed to encouraging the geese to move on. John Fisher Park Superintendent Wasaga Beach Provincial Park Ontario Parks
From: owner-beachnet@great-lakes.net [ mailto:owner-beachnet@great-lakes.net] On Behalf Of O'Brien, Eric [DNR] Sent: November 26, 2007 3:39 PM To: beachnet@great-lakes.net Subject: BEACHNET==> Gull wiring at beaches Hello all – Does anyone have examples of cases where wiring was used to deter gulls/geese from beaches? I have heard some people talk about them being a cheap deterrent, but the only example I could find was from Ottowa and cost sever hundred thousand dollars. Any information about who to contact, design schematics or pictures of the systems would be very helpful.
Thanks,
Eric
_______________________________________________
Eric O’Brien
Beach Monitoring Coordinator
Iowa DNR, Water Monitoring
109 Trowbridge Hall
Iowa City, IA 52242-1319
Office: (319) 353-2835
Cell: (319) 560-6128
Email: Eric.OBrien@dnr.iowa.gov
_______________________________________________
_______________________________________ Elizabeth Wheeler Alm, Ph.D. Professor, Microbiology 157 Brooks Hall Central Michigan University Mount Pleasant, MI 48859 email: alm1ew@cmich.edu web address: http://www.cst.cmich.edu/users/alm1ew/index.html
Office phone: 989-774-2503 Lab phone: 989-774-1862 Dept. phone: 989-774-3227 Dept. fax: 989-774-3462
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