Nuisance magpie in garden

We have the same problem of a magpie terrorising one of our cats. It keeps just far enough away from Jaffa to stop him catching it and makes the really annoying noises !

We think Jaffa started it last year by bringing one of its babies home for us.
 
throw an onion at it... it worked for me when i had an annoying magpie in the garden making it sound like ww3 is happening out there at silly o clock in the morning, never heard it again.
 
We have the same problem of a magpie terrorising one of our cats. It keeps just far enough away from Jaffa to stop him catching it and makes the really annoying noises !

We think Jaffa started it last year by bringing one of its babies home for us.

Yeah, I think this is what Pickles did!
 
Are you sure it's a magpie and not a queen wasp? Apparently you have to be an expert to recognise them.
 
throw an onion at it... it worked for me when i had an annoying magpie in the garden making it sound like ww3 is happening out there at silly o clock in the morning, never heard it again.

Don't you need a license for that kind of thing? Darn, UK onion laws are so confusing.
 
Build a time machine, go back in time and captue a pterodactyl, train it to hunt magpies, leave it in the garden over night , easy!

only problem I see is that it may not be legal
 
Build a time machine, go back in time and captue a pterodactyl, train it to hunt magpies, leave it in the garden over night , easy!

only problem I see is that it may not be legal

Well there is a massive flaw in your plan which you seem to have overlooked thus rendering your plan useless.

The atmosphere the pterodactyl lived in would not be the same as today and may not survive.

Please think things through before coming up with hair brained plans.
 
Depending on the size of your garden you could always consider threading fine fishing line across your plot at irregular intervals.

That should stop them dive bombing your cat.

I know it was suggested years ago as a method of keeping birds off fine seed beds.

As children we used to catch birds (and let them go) by using a garden sieve propped up with a stick to which we'd tie a piece of fine string. We'd place bread under the sieve. When the birds were feeding we'd pull the sting thereby causing the sieve to fall to the ground. Sometimes we'd catch them sometimes not.

One child in the village would catch them and feed them to his cat, his grandfather used to fire his shotgun from his living room widow at starlings in his garden. He then used to make starling pie and eat them. Uck!
 
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