Tired
Well-known member

My cat and I have been enjoying watching the birds at the feeders I have set up, but that's not safe any more, because of the avian flu in the US. I'll say it right now: if there's no reasonable way to do this, I'll take the feeders down in a heartbeat and keep 'em in until the avian flu is gone. But I'm wondering if there's any way I can keep at least one thing up.
If I were to sterilize a feeder between every individual bird, and make sure only one bird was ever on the feeder at once, that would be safe. It would be ridiculous and basically impossible, but it would work. So I'm wondering if there's anything I can do that would be less ridiculous, while still being, if not completely safe, at least no more of a disease spread risk than any given popular-with-birds bush.
I have one feeder that's a little dish for seeds, with a perch around it. If I were to change out the dish every day, discard the old seeds, wipe the perch down with bleach at the same time, and keep just that feeder up, would that be okay? Obviously a sick bird landing next to a healthy bird can't be prevented by bleach, at least not by any ethical usage of it, but the feeder's pretty small and I've only ever seen one species of bird on it at a time.
How long does the avian flu live on surfaces? And does 10% bleach kill it, if the bleach has long enough before evaporating? I know bleach kills most things.
If I want to go to a park that has a lot of birds, is there anything other than bleach I can clean my shoes with, to kill any possible fomites? We have bleach wipes, but I'm asking about other options because I'm not sure I trust myself to not absent-mindedly get bleach on my clothes somehow. I don't recall if the wipes we have are color-safe. Rubbing alcohol works on shoes, right?
If I were to sterilize a feeder between every individual bird, and make sure only one bird was ever on the feeder at once, that would be safe. It would be ridiculous and basically impossible, but it would work. So I'm wondering if there's anything I can do that would be less ridiculous, while still being, if not completely safe, at least no more of a disease spread risk than any given popular-with-birds bush.
I have one feeder that's a little dish for seeds, with a perch around it. If I were to change out the dish every day, discard the old seeds, wipe the perch down with bleach at the same time, and keep just that feeder up, would that be okay? Obviously a sick bird landing next to a healthy bird can't be prevented by bleach, at least not by any ethical usage of it, but the feeder's pretty small and I've only ever seen one species of bird on it at a time.
How long does the avian flu live on surfaces? And does 10% bleach kill it, if the bleach has long enough before evaporating? I know bleach kills most things.
If I want to go to a park that has a lot of birds, is there anything other than bleach I can clean my shoes with, to kill any possible fomites? We have bleach wipes, but I'm asking about other options because I'm not sure I trust myself to not absent-mindedly get bleach on my clothes somehow. I don't recall if the wipes we have are color-safe. Rubbing alcohol works on shoes, right?