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Outwitting Squirrels: 101 Cunning Stratagems to Reduce Dramatically the Egregious Misappropriation of Seed from Your Birdfeeder by Squirrels

by Bill Adler, Jr.

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339677,389 (3.43)2
Describes how to outsmart the greedy, crafty squirrels who are determined to make all birdseed their own.
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» See also 2 mentions

Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
An amusing, quick read with some truly good info, but the topic doesn't bear book length discussion and the list of 101 stratagems seems to be included because the book needed a clever subtitle rather than for any real purpose. ( )
  pdever | May 21, 2021 |
I admit, I love squirrels and feed them whenever I can so this book with its very funny but negative view of these cute rodents. ( )
  Karen74Leigh | Oct 22, 2019 |
Informative and fun at the same time, even more so if you pronounce "squirrel" like Natasha from Rocky and Bullwinkle. Really just the title alone is enough. ( )
  Bodagirl | Mar 4, 2014 |
I love this title so much!
  EhEh | Apr 3, 2013 |
A humorous and user-tested compendium of anti-squirrel tactics that was tremendously helpful when we lived in a leafy East Coast suburb; it's not so useful here in San Francisco, alas, where I haven't seen any of the beasts outside of Golden Gate Park. The eastern gray squirrel (Sciurus carolinensis) is nearly ubiquitous in the Northeast and I grew fond of them--especially when they leaped onto the birdfeeder, spun around, and fell off. Heh. ( )
1 vote IreneF | Nov 13, 2008 |
Showing 1-5 of 6 (next | show all)
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To my parents,

whom I constantly tried to outwit as a child,

and who, sometimes,

lovingly let me get away with it.
First words
Introduction
"They're here."
Author's Notes on the Second Edition
I caught myself feeding a squirrel the other day.
It could happen to anyone.
Quotations
After all, squirrels think that the birdseed is for them and there's no power on earth that will convince them otherwise.
Since the Internet was developed in 1987 it, more than any single other instrument, has improved our capability to thwart squirrels by facilitating the rapid exchange of information about squirrels.  Information can be transferred through the Net faster than squirrels can run.  Although there have been reports of squirrels chewing through phone lines to sabotage our lines of communications, I don't think that squirrels have yet learned how valuable the Internet has become.  (One Netzian disagreed.  To one of my queries he wrote, "Go ahead.  Put all your best tricks on the Internet where the International Squirrels Who Raid Birdfeeders Association can download them for research in ways to overcome them!")  (Author's Notes on the Second Edition, p.xvii)
It was at this point that I asked Dr. Flyger, "Have you ever been bitten?"   That's kind of a rhetorical question, of course, for a man who studies squirrels, but I had to ask.  Flyger responded.  "Oh, yes.  But it's not too bad.  It's a relative thing.  After all, I used to work with polar bears."  (Chapter Three, "Know the Enemy", p.53)
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Describes how to outsmart the greedy, crafty squirrels who are determined to make all birdseed their own.

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Told with a good bit of humor. -PuddinTame
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