Things You'll Need
- Bread crumbs
- Cardboard box without the lid
- Brown paper sacks
- Y-shaped branch, 5 inches long
- Fishing line, 15 feet
Instructions
A Cardboard Box Trap
Prepare the box. Use any rectangular box without a lid. Xerox boxes work are ideal. If it is not brown, glue brown paper sack to the outside to cover up the color. Place it outside, open end down, in the area where the trap will be. Spread bread crumbs around the box. Keep putting a handful of bread crumbs around the box for five days.
Find a thin Y-shaped branch from a backyard tree. Bust it off to 5 inches.
Wrap one end of the fishing wire securely near the top of the Y-shaped branch. Make certain that a quick tug on the fishing wire will not pull it off. Place the thin Y-shaped branch, pointed side down, 1 inch in the dirt in front of the box. Position it, so it will be midway the distance of the width of the box. Leave it there for the five days you are sprinkling bread crumbs.
Raise the box, on the sixth day, at the width end closest to the Y-shaped branch. Balance that end at the intersection of the Y-shaped branch. Shift the box if is not resting perfectly on the "Y." Check that the opposite end of the box is flat against the ground.
Sprinkle a handful of bread crumbs around the box, and include a handful for inside the box. Take the untied end of the fishing wire, and walk away. Hide behind a tree or door, and observe the robins as they are feeding.
Yank the fishing wire when a robin goes under the box to eat the bread crumbs. This will bring down the edge of the box trapping the bird inside.