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Barn Owl Blog

Barn Owl's team of experts have amassed decades of insights and knowledge into a series of helpful articles. Browse the latest news and posts below, including by topic tag.

Wildlife-Friendly Rodent Control: Protecting Your Farm Without Poisons

Barn Owl Blog

Wildlife-Friendly Rodent Control: Protecting Your Farm Without Poisons

by on Nov 17 2025
Poison is effective, but it comes with risks:pets, working dogs, barn cats, owls, hawks, foxes, and even livestock can be harmed through secondary poisoning. Fortunately, there are safe, wildlife-friendly ways to keep rodent populations under control while protecting the ecosystem. 1. Encourage Barn Owls and Other Raptors Install owl boxes, reduce bright nighttime lighting, and keep hunting zones clear. Benefits: Owls eat thousands of rodents Zero cost after installation No chemical exposure 2. Use Snap Traps or Electronic Traps Indoors These are reliable, fast, and pose far fewer risks than poisons. Place traps: along walls near feed behind bins 3. Clean Up Feed Spillage Immediately Spills attract wildlife that then attract predators — creating chaos in the barn. A daily sweep can reduce rodents by 50%. 4. Seal Gaps, Holes, and Entry Points Rodent-proofing is cheap and incredibly effective: steel wool metal flashing wooden trim weather stripping 5. Use Cameras to Track Activity Without Interfering with Wildlife Cameras are the perfect wildlife-friendly rodent-control tool because they help you: determine how many rodents you’re dealing with pinpoint entry routes monitor owls, hawks, and other natural predators verify that non-poison methods are working avoid setting traps where beneficial wildlife travels Barn Owl cameras provide reliable night vision and motion detection, giving farmers non-invasive monitoring that supports both pest control and wildlife health. Protect your feed — and your ecosystem — by choosing smarter monitoring instead of stronger poisons.
How to Set Up a Rodent-Resistant Feed Room (Without Using Poison)

Barn Owl Blog

How to Set Up a Rodent-Resistant Feed Room (Without Using Poison)

by on Nov 17 2025
Increasingly, farmers are moving away from rodent poisons due to concerns about livestock, working dogs, barn cats, and secondary wildlife poisoning. The good news? You can build a feed room that naturally repels rodents—without using a single toxin. Here’s how to set it up right. 1. Upgrade Your Feed Containers Open bags are an open invitation. Instead, store feed in: metal cans heavy rubber-latching containers sealed, stackable bins Rodents can chew plastic, but most can’t penetrate heavy-duty bins. 2. Elevate All Stored Feed Rodents rarely climb metal shelving, but they love floor piles.Elevate all feed at least 6 inches off the ground. Pro tip:Use pallets topped with flat boards to prevent tunneling from underneath. 3. Seal Gaps at Least ½ Inch or Larger A mouse can squeeze through a hole the width of a dime. Focus on: corners door frames gaps around piping floor-to-wall transitions Steel wool and metal flashing are inexpensive and effective. 4. Encourage Natural Predators—Especially Barn Owls One barn owl family can devour 1,500–3,000 rodents per season.Install an owl box near the barn to invite nature’s best pest control. 5. Use Cameras to Identify Trouble Spots Before Making Changes Before investing hours sealing cracks or reorganizing the feed room, gather intelligence. Night-vision cameras help you: find exact entry points understand rodent traffic patterns confirm where feed is being targeted determine whether owls or other predators are actively hunting nearby Barn Owl cameras excel at this because they’re built for low-light environments and deliver reliable motion-triggered footage. You get one week of monitoring,and suddenly every rodent mystery makes sense.
The Hidden Cost of Rodents: How Much Feed Are You Really Losing?

Barn Owl Blog

The Hidden Cost of Rodents: How Much Feed Are You Really Losing?

by on Nov 17 2025
When most farmers and ranchers think about feed loss, they picture wind, moisture, or spilled grain. But across North America, the biggest source of feed loss is something far smaller—and much busier after dark. Rodents. Mice and rats cost livestock producers thousands of dollars every year, and the losses are often invisible until the damage is done. While it may feel like “only a few chewed bags,” the numbers tell a different story. How Much Feed Are Rodents Really Consuming? Studies from agricultural universities show that 10–30% of stored feed is lost to rodents annually. But here’s the real kicker: Rodents contaminate more feed than they eat. A mouse only eats around 3–4 grams a day, but a single mouse can contaminate 10 times as much feed through urine, droppings, and nesting behavior. Multiply that by dozens—or hundreds—of rodents, and the losses add up fast. Rodent Reproduction: The Hidden Multiplier One pair of mice can produce 2,000 offspring a year. Rats can have up to 12 litters annually. Most activity takes place between 10 PM and 4 AM. It’s easy to miss the warning signs when the entire operation happens in the dark. How Rodents Damage Your Feed Beyond Consumption Rodents: Chew through bags, making feed vulnerable to moisture and mold Ruin feed by tunneling into grain bins or totes Shred packaging to build nests Spread contaminants that make feed unsafe for livestock Even high-quality feed can become unusable after just a few nights of rodent activity. How to Measure Your Real Feed Loss If you’ve noticed: unexplained feed shortages chewed corners on bags random holes in grain piles shadows or sounds at night …you’re almost certainly losing money. But the best way to know what’s really happening? Use Nighttime Cameras to See What You’re Missing Most rodent activity goes completely unnoticed. A camera—especially one with strong infrared night vision, motion triggers, and app alerts—can reveal: where rodents are entering your feed room how many are visiting nightly what feed sources they target whether your prevention efforts are working Barn Owl cameras are built for low-light and night-time monitoring, making them ideal for barns and feed rooms where activity spikes after sunset. You can’t fix a rodent problem you can’t see.A week of nighttime footage often exposes more than a year of guesswork.
How to Winterize Your Feed Room Before Temperatures Drop

Barn Owl Blog

How to Winterize Your Feed Room Before Temperatures Drop

by on Nov 14 2025
Preparing your feed room for winter pays off immediately and prevents problems all season long.A little work now means fewer pests, less waste, and better feed quality. Here’s your winter-prep checklist. 1. Seal All Cracks and Gaps Cold weather drives rodents indoors. Seal: door frames floor gaps utility pipe openings corners Use metal flashing, caulk, or steel wool. 2. Add Weather Stripping to Doors Rodents squeeze under loose or drafty doors.Weather stripping blocks them out and keeps the room warmer. 3. Clean Out Old or Damaged Feed Bags Get rid of: moldy feed torn bags forgotten partial bags Old feed attracts rodents instantly. 4. Add Insulation Where Needed Insulate: the roof above the feed room exterior-facing walls doors Insulation keeps condensation down. 5. Install or Reposition Cameras Before Winter Hits Winter nights are long — and pests become bold. Place cameras so they cover: entry points shelves feed containers barn aisles hay storage Barn Owl cameras operate well in cold temperatures and maintain clear night vision, making them ideal for winter feed-room protection. Winter is coming — make sure your feed room is ready.
5 Winter Feed Storage Mistakes That Are Costing You Money

Barn Owl Blog

5 Winter Feed Storage Mistakes That Are Costing You Money

by on Nov 14 2025
Winter is a tough season for feed storage. Moisture rises, temperatures fluctuate, and rodents move indoors looking for easy calories. Even experienced farmers can lose feed during the winter without realizing why. Here are the top five winter feed storage mistakes—and how to fix them fast. 1. Storing Feed Directly Against Walls Rodents always travel along edges. When bags or bins are pushed flush against walls, rodents chew right through without being seen. Fix:Leave 4–6 inches of space between walls and feed. It improves airflow and lets you see tunnels or chew marks before they spread. 2. Letting Moisture Build Up in Unventilated Barns Condensation inside cold barns is a silent feed killer. Damp walls or floors lead to: mold in bags clumping in loose feed spoilage in grain bins Fix:Use ventilation—even in winter. A small airflow reduces moisture by up to 60%. 3. Keeping Grain Bins Half Open It’s common to leave bins cracked “just a bit” for convenience. But a 1" gap is basically an invitation for everything from mice to raccoons. Fix:Lock lids tightly and patch even tiny openings. 4. Leaving Old or Torn Feed Bags in the Corner The feed dust and crumbs at the bottom of old bags attract rodents quickly. One bag can start an infestation. Fix:Rotate feed. Dump leftovers into sealed containers and dispose of old bags promptly. 5. Treating Feed Rooms as Low-Priority Spaces Because they’re not high-traffic, feed rooms tend to become: cluttered dark filled with “just for now” storage Those blind spots are rodent paradise. Fix:Improve lighting and visibility—especially in corners and shelves. Where Cameras Fit Into Winter Feed Protection Winter is when rodents are boldest. A camera provides eyes in the places you’re not present: nighttime feed-room footage motion detection alerts identification of gaps or weak spots verification that your rodent-proofing efforts are working Barn Owl cameras thrive in low-light barns, providing clear nighttime footage that helps farmers prevent winter feed waste before it spirals. A simple camera can save hundreds of dollars in feed—and hours of cleanup.
How to Run a Winter Feed Audit (And Save Money Doing It)

Barn Owl Blog

How to Run a Winter Feed Audit (And Save Money Doing It)

by on Nov 14 2025
Every winter, feed use increases while daylight decreases — and that combination makes it easy to lose track of feed costs. A simple winter feed audit can prevent overspending and highlight hidden waste. Here’s how to do it in under an hour. Step 1: Count Your Inventory Record: number of feed bags partial bags hay bales supplements grain bin levels Use this as your baseline. Step 2: Inspect for Damage or Contamination Look for: holes clumping moldy smell droppings chew marks spilled feed If a section of the feed room or hay yard shows repeated damage, mark it. Step 3: Track Consumption for One Week Record daily use to calculate: average consumption per head seasonal change unexpected loss Most farms discover a 10–20% discrepancy between expected vs actual usage. Step 4: Use Cameras to Diagnose Unexplained Losses A camera instantly answers questions like: Are rodents stealing feed at night? Is livestock sneaking into feed areas? Are raccoons or skunks raiding bins? Are employees closing doors and lids? Are storms or snow drifts getting feed wet? Nothing reveals inefficiencies faster. Step 5: Make Adjustments and Recheck Next Week Small fixes go a long way: sealing gaps moving feed off the floor reorganizing clutter adjusting storage methods Barn Owl cameras help you monitor whether the changes work — without having to check the feed room every night. A weekly audit can save hundreds by spring.

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