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donky7

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About donky7

  • Rank
    Registered User
  • Birthday 08/06/1968

Personal Information

  • Location
    mansfield
  • Interests
    photography and shooting.
  • Occupation
    pest technician
  1. Rats DO eat dog waste, however they are more likely to prefer the bird table, somewhere will be a place where they are living... under shed, inside a shed that's not really used etc... rats love untidy places and overgrown foliage, this allows them to freely move around in a safe manor unseen. They will be living very close to the table. Remove either the food or the harbourage and the rats will move on to the next BED & BREAKFAST.
  2. Very late reply, but hopefully someone will read this.... Depending on which bee, only beekeepers want honey bees, I'm both a bee keeper and a pest controller. Any other bee is not of any value. Key is to try to identify prior to calling either keeper or a pesty. Key facts to look for, SIZE, COLOUR, HABITAT, FLYING PATTERN. Bumbles are mainly big and round and come in many colours, more commonly the bees that like cavity walls have a white bum... white ailed bumble bee, these have a short life span, non aggressive (provided you don't provoke them) and towards the end of their 2 month life the new young males hang around the outside of other nests waiting for the new queens to exit and mate, (only females sting) so if you see this pattern of these bumbles they are not swarming simply waiting to pounce on new queens to mate. Honey bees are obviously smaller and once swarmed into a new location then the wont, predominantly swarm again that year, their activity is like a wasp.... straight in,, straight out......... no wasted energy hanging around. Solitary bees (mining, masonry etc etc.... again have a short life span but their sting is not strong enough to get through human skin, and again pose no real threat... My main calls through the summer for BEES are nearly always bumbles which really should be tolerated not destroyed. I do, from time to time relocate the bumble bees and their nests providing I can get at them... however this is always chargeable from most pesties. SAVE THE BEES !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
  3. Im currently building a site for urban fox/badger control methods purely advising on non lethal control methods I require 2 fox and 2 badger images to use on the front page, all low res. I have a budget for these 4 images and will also credit the photographers on this website here's a test site - http://www.urban-wildlife.co.uk/test/ Any wildlife photographers have stunning images ? thanks.. Martyn.
  4. theres an old dairy farm, here in Mansfield. hers 1 of the sheds.
  5. if i had a google search on any of my sites, i'd expect google to pay me' !!!
  6. fair point, register on the serif users forum, some gread advice on there.. http://forums.serif.com/forumdisplay.php?f=13
  7. ditto, also you need to do lots more in many areas, the higher you wave your flag the more its available to be seen. plus if your site is that of your signature, i was put off straight away from the amount of content on your home page, keep it simple, who you are, what you do, where you are.
  8. brinsley wildlife centre !!!! cracking people, cracking place. look on google'
  9. i agree.. i use DPP as my default prog, greyed out means not accessable...
  10. fab for a first go.. love it what light was used..????? was it a simple torch.?
  11. After feeding on blood, an adult female flea will lay up to several hundred eggs within three weeks. These eggs will hatch in one week to ten days. you need to break the life cycle to completly erradicate, i charge £85 to treat a normally 6 roomed house using 5ltrs of accute pesticides on 2 visits, first visit will do the adults but not the eggs, 12 days later the 2nd visit will hit the newly emerged larvae. how far will a few cans go from the vet...???? look here at a diagram of the larval stages...
  12. yep, all working here too.. thanks for sharing, a friend has gone for the weekend, with his 50d and long lense.
  13. should anyone manage to see it again, these are great folk..... http://www.derbyfoxes.org.uk/
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