This question was posted to me recently:
" Pak Harry, after some time can these swiftlets change their flying path? Let say now my BH is below their flight path now, say 5 to 10 years, from now will they change?"
A very sensible question which I thing need to get sensible answers.
My answer is yes however the probability is slim unless there are a few drastic changes in the followings:
1) The food source which they used to go and hunt depleted badly. This might be due to bad weather or a serious forest fire. If their hunting ground are totally burned down they will move their hunting locations to a newer place. This will effect their flight path.
2) A new walet central suddenly came into the vicinity of your BH. This can happen when a new walet central was created by some one who is good swiftlet farming. This person knows the ins and outs of making sure that his new BHs are perfect and will pull all those birds to move to his new BH. If this should happen, very rare in deed, the flight path will be affected to.
3) Suddenly there is a new source of food along the way home. This is something that not many people have thought about. Just imagine suddenly a new water pond or waste treatment plant were in operation a few short kilometers from you BH and they are spewing out lots of those mayflies. These birds will now move their flight path to that pond before going home. If this ponds are not within your BH range, you will experience this unusual flight path change.
What can you do to reinstate them?
The best that you can do is to look into creating the environment to lure them to you BH areas.
I suggest that it would be advisable for you to start looking at proving food within your BH compound.
You might want to built a suitable water pond and inside those ponds you rear some kind of plants that will produce insects.
You might want to store some wood logs. Choose those that are capable of generating a kind of beetles that are a food source to those swiftlets.
The easiest would be to built a small barn where you can generate fruit flies. These fruit flies are easily cultivated. What you need are rotten fruits and some yeast. If they are slow in breeding you might want to introduce those insect powder in the barn to be the core insects to spread onto those rotten fruits.
Well if you are afraid that they might change their flight path, you need to quickly populate your BH in the first 5 years.
Remember, the best is to get 500 nest within the 5 years period and the rest is a history.
Once your BH touches 500 nests, subject to the stable micro and macro habitats, they will multiply at least 3 times a year. From this moment they should grow in an exponential path.
As such you are on the way to the bank every three months. That actually is the right flight path. He he he.
Edible Birdnest farming can be considered an ideal, most exciting and a very lucrative business. This venture is suitable for those who live in parts of Cambodia, Southern Thailand, Burma, Malaysia, Vietnam, the Philippine and Indonesia. This blog is dedicated to my findings, crazy ideas, encounters with newbies, comments from friends, local news, pictures relevant to Birdnest plus my personal experiences and knowledge gained in swiftlet farming.
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