I visited a BH in Penang recently and after being revamped and put into operation, about 4-5 months, the birds populated the house slowly and steadily.
I was not 100 percent happy however to the owner the number was better as compared to before the revamp works.
One clear observation was where those birds choose to stay.
Out of the total about 60% were inside those fake nests that were from another BH that were used before. I plucked a few and install just to proof my theory.
This proof my theory about the usefulness of recycled fake nests.
Those birds inclined to choosing those fake nests that were used by others.
There are many possible reasons but the feeling of being safe might be a strong reason.
My point here is that if you wanted to quickly populate your new BH you should look into shifting those used fake nests from your other old BH to this new BH.
To those who do not owned BH before you need to find a way to get these recycle nests. Even if it cause RM100 a piece just grab them. Remember if you installed say 10 pieces ( total cost of RM1000), and all were occupied within a few short months, your property value will surged by RM10,000.
If you are smart you should try to move the same fake nests to another floor after being used one time at the first location.
Just imagine if you moved these 10 nests three times a year and contributed 30 new set of tenants, you asset will now worth an additional RM30,000.
What if you get 20 pieces instead of 10?
Remember there is no 100% guarantees but there is nothing wrong to try something that you never thought of before.
I have used this technique many times and it works. Trust me !!!
Who else will open this type of secret?
Only Pak Harry.
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.
No comments:
Post a Comment