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"Swing-Out" Bird Feeder Keeps Seed Off Deck
It’s fun to watch birds eat from a bird feeder on your deck. The problem is that you get a mess of seeds and shells that you have to clean up later. That’s why Nicholas Creveling built a “swing-out” feeder that pivots toward the deck for filling, and swings out over the yard for feeding.
  He used a 36-in. piece of 2 1/4-in. pipe that’s lag bolted to a 4 by 4 deck post. A 16-in. length of 2-in. dia. pipe fits inside the 2 1/4-in. pipe and is threaded at the top, where an elbow forms the pivot point. From there a 30-in. length of 2-in. dia. pipe, threaded at both ends, leads horizontally to another elbow and a 2-in. flange that supports the bird feeder. The flange is threaded into the pipe and bolted to the bottom of the feeder, which is made from treated wood. It measures 32 in. long by 24 in. wide.
  “I built it 8 years ago and couldn’t be happier with it,” says Creveling. “My only cost was $2 for the flange. The 16-in. length of 2-in. dia. pipe that rotates rests on a bolt that runs through the 2 1/4-in. dia. vertical pipe.
  “To compensate for the weight of the swing-out feeder, shims or washers may be required between the pipe and deck post in order to keep the feeder level,” notes Creveling.
  Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Nicholas Creveling, 3331 Solon, Cedar Springs, Mich. 49319 (ph 616 696-2597)


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2012 - Volume #36, Issue #2