Tuesday, June 21, 2011

How to Keep Pest Birds Out of Airplane Hangars

Bird-netting-hangar

By Fran Prisco

Airplane hangars have often become a natural habitat for birds.  They are wide open, offer shelter and ideal nesting areas. Clinton Air Force Base in Oklahoma had six hangars with 200-300 house sparrows in each hangar. Lockbourne Air Base in Ohio had 2,000 to 3,000 house sparrows between three hangars with an additional 2,000-3,000 starlings.  Along with these birds come the droppings and debris they leave behind.  Bird droppings, accumulating on the aluminum skin of airplanes, can corrode the metal and eventually weaken the structure itself. Another serious concern is that if droppings, feathers, and other matter get into the engines, critically important parts must be cleaned as they could stop an engine during flight. Cleaning an aircraft engine is very expensive and time consuming.

Pest bird droppings can also pose significant health risks, carrying and transmitting any of 60 known diseases. Sparrows and Feral Pigeons can carry bacteria causing Salmonellosis. Feral Pigeons carry Ornithosis, which is similar to viral pneumonia. Not only do the droppings and debris left behind by birds damage the airplanes kept in hangars, they are also dangerous to the personal working on the planes.

Problem:  Pest birds are causing added maintenance to aircraft and endangering airline personal with their droppings and debris.  Thousands of dollars spent each year on cleaning aircraft skins, engines and airplane hangar infrastructures. 

Solution:  Install bird netting in the airplane hanger.  Bird netting is an exclusionary bird control system.  Once installed, pest birds are excluded from the area being protected by the bird net.  It is often necessary to install bird netting on the sides of the walls as well as under the roof.  The goal is to block off any areas that pest birds will find attractive to land, roost and nest.  Once installed, the bird netting is virtually invisible and will need very little maintenance.  In fact there are bird net installations inside airplane hangars that have gone untouched for well over 10 years and are still as effective as the day that they where installed.

When choosing bird netting to install in an airplane hangar or any area, be sure to get heavy-duty bird netting that has a break strength of at least 45 pounds.  This ensures that the netting will be strong enough to keep birds from defeating it.  Bird netting comes in various mesh sizes.  The ¾ inch mesh bird netting is ideal for all types of birds, the mesh is small enough so that even small birds like sparrows cannot get through.  If large birds like pigeons and gulls are the issue, choose a bird netting with a 2-inch mesh size, this can save a lot of money for large bird netting jobs.

If the bird netting installation looks to be too complicated, look for a professional bird control installer in your area that can help.   Manufacturers of bird control products can usually suggest the right person or company for the job.
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Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Save Your Commercial Signage with Heavy Duty Bird Netting

Bird-netting-protects-sign
by Alex A. Kecskes

As any commercial business owner knows, signage is not cheap. Good signage is, in most cases, a custom order and represents the identity of the business. In addition to being informative, it projects who you are and what you stand for. All the more reason to protect that image and keep it sterling and clean.

One of the biggest threats to commercial signage is the pest bird. They can deface and destroy virtually any sign whether it's constructed of plastic, wood, metal or a composite of these materials. This is because most bird droppings contain high levels of acid, which over time, can eat into and corrode almost any material.

By the way, nesting materials and feathers make perfect kindling for fires. When these materials gather near electrical signage wiring or bulbs, it's an accident waiting to happen. Signs have been known ignite and plastic signs, especially, go up like a dry Christmas tree.
Another problem with birds and signage is that birds who nest and roost in signs often leave bird droppings on the entryways and walkways directly below them. This can lead to dangerous slip-and-fall hazards for both employees and customers. The legal liability here is almost too costly to think about.

There are a number of ways you can address your bird problem. Bird poisons are one way, but they are inhumane, and dead birds falling at the entrance of your business can turn away customers. The preferred solution is to use Heavy Duty Bird Netting.

Bird netting is an exclusionary bird barrier that has been proven to keep birds out of signage. Birds like sparrow, starlings and pigeons can't penetrate the netting and so they simply move on. Since most signs are located on the exterior of commercial enterprises, it just makes sense to get the most durable Bird Netting you can find.  After all, if you're going to go to the trouble of installing netting, you might as well get netting that lasts.

Here's the thing with Heavy-Duty polyethylene Bird Netting. It's made from a U.V. stabilized mesh and comes in various stock sizes and custom cuts. Depending on the bird you're tying to exclude and the size of your sign, you have three choices: a 2-inch mesh, 1 1/8-inch mesh, and 3/4-inch mesh.

The best netting is ISO 1806 protocol mesh tested. It's flame resistant with a 270-degree F. melting point. This caliber of netting is also rot-proof, non-conductive and stable in sub zero temperatures. The netting is made using 6 monofilaments, each12/1000s of an inch thick. Twisted together to produce a sturdy twine, the monofilaments help give this net a breaking strength that exceeds 40 lbs. Bird Netting like this comes with a 10-year guarantee. It's highly efficient and effective, so much so that it's specified by architects.

To remain effective, Heavy Duty Bird Netting must be properly installed. Before installation, all contact surfaces should be thoroughly cleaned and free of bird droppings, nesting materials, rust, peeling paint or other debris. Improperly installed Bird Netting can sag or droop, creating gaps that birds can claw through.

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Monday, June 13, 2011

How Bird Proof Netting Can Keep Pest Birds Off Your Property

Birdproof-netting

by Alex A. Kecskes

Year after year, pest birds cost homeowners, businesses and cities millions in property damage. While many have tried all sorts of repellents and deterrents, the birds just keep on coming. Shotguns, propane cannons, firecrackers, flares, even using predator attack birds to seek out and kill the pests have failed. There is one solution that many have adopted as an effective pest bird deterrent.

Netting…the Pest Bird Barrier that Works

Bird proof netting has been proven to be effective as a physical barrier in large indoor and outdoor areas. It has kept pest birds out of courtyards, patios, storage yards and similar areas. Thanks to bird proof netting, property owners worldwide have been spared considerable cleanup and repair expenses. Netting has also prevented the slip-and-fall accidents that have cost many property owners prohibitively expensive personal injury settlements.

Safeguarding Food

Bird proof netting has been used to keep pest birds away from restaurants, in particular, outdoor eateries. Birds, as any purveyor of food will tell you, love to hide in nooks and crannies to swoop down on tables and patios to annoy customers. Bird droppings splattered on signs, tables, chairs and entryways can ruin the reputation of even the finest bistro or outdoor café. And health inspectors, fully aware that birds can carry any of 60 known diseases, can and will cite a restaurant littered with bird droppings and nest debris.

Monday, June 6, 2011

Airline Hangars stay Bird Free with Bird Netting

Bird-netting-hangar

by Alex A. Kecskes

These days, airlines have enough to concern themselves with: escalating building maintenance costs, bad weather, rising utilities expenses, tight budgets. But there is one problem they don't need right now.

Problem:
Pest birds. Our fine-feathered friends can quickly become a major problem in airline hangars. Without effective pest bird barriers to exclude them, hangar operators spend millions of dollars annually in maintenance and cleanup costs. The problem is, birds like to settle in and build their nests in all those lofty areas inside a hangar. Those high beams, ducts, crevices, nooks and crannies are kept nice and warm by aircraft engines being tested and other equipment. It doesn't take long for pest birds to gather in numbers and create all sorts of headaches for airline hanger operators.

One big headache is bird droppings. These can damage many areas of an aircraft, including exposed engines and assemblies—electrical and mechanical. The acidic chemicals in droppings can eat into metal, plastic and rubber surfaces, causing significant damage that may cause engines and hydraulic systems to fail--even in flight.

Not as alarming, but also expensive is the damage pest birds can cause to the hanger. For example, bird droppings and nesting materials can clog gutters and down pipes. They can also block grilles, ducts and vents, and they can damage expensive HVAC systems. Left to gather, bird droppings can also block skylights and freeze up security camera mechanisms. And, since most airline hangers have smooth concrete floors, bird droppings can create dangerous slip-and-fall hazards that result in serious injury to workers and visitors—either way, you're looking at costly medical bills and possible litigation. The right kind of bird control can reduce or prevent these problems.

Remember, once pest birds invade a hangar to nest and roost, it takes a lot to get them to finally leave. Which is why keeping them out in the first place is so important. Fortunately, there are effective and humane bird barrier products you can install to keep pest birds out of airline hangars.

Solution:
No Knot Bird Netting. The idea here is to exclude pest birds from the hangar areas they like most--all those high places that are warm and safe and cozy for nest building.  The best way to do that is with No Knot Bird Netting. Made of flame resistant polypropylene, this heavy-duty professional grade netting is chemically inert and highly resistant to a wide range of chemicals and temperatures. It will not rot, absorb water, or mildew. And it's ISO 1806 Protocol Mesh Tested and U.V. stabilized to last.  If you've been troubled with pigeons, sparrows, starlings, crows and gulls, this is the bird netting to block them out. It comes in various stock sizes and custom cuts--including 2- and 3/4-inch mesh. It's also very light, easy to handle and simple to install. You can even get this netting in several different colors--including white, stone and black to blend in better with your hanger.

If your hangar tends to draw bats, you might consider getting some Bat Netting. This heavy-duty netting is ideal for keeping these pests out of secluded or semi-secluded areas. The best bat netting is U.V. protected with a 3/8-inch mesh. It comes in different sizes--typically 10’x10’, 25’x25’, 50’x50’, and 50'x100'. One manufacturer even offers a 10-year guarantee.

Installing bird netting is simple and straightforward. The objective is to properly seal off any openings around the edges, nooks and crannies. Birds are smart and will eventually discover a way around the net if you give them the slightest opening.

Remember, the best bird prevention strategy is to plan ahead. That means installing bird netting in areas you anticipate birds might nest and roost. If you do this before birds invade your airline hanger, it will be bird free and your maintenance costs will surely go down.
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