[Nfb-krafters-korner] Gourd Bird Houses

Dixie cobaltblueheron at gmail.com
Fri Jun 22 10:34:03 UTC 2018


I would suggest a hole saw.  The paddle bit is less expensive so is often
recommended.

A whole saw is a cup shaped saw blade, used to cut the holes to make for
door knobs and things like that.  It is used by attaching it to a drill as
well.  

Being that the whole saw is something where pressure is applied equally
around the perimeter of the entire whole you may have better luck keeping it
put.

The other idea I would suggest is to start a pilot whole and then use either
the hole saw or the paddle saw.  This will get the tip of the paddle saw
into the gourd a bit and steady it a bit, and maybe that way you'll have
more luck.

Depending on what species of bird you're trying to house depends on what
size hole you put in your bird house.
For a Wren the hole size is 1 1/4 inches.

The proper size hole for a Purple Martin is: 1 7/8 or 2 inches.


Also it is important to know that the whole in a gourd bird house belongs up
on the neck of the gourd not on the belly.

Dixie

@-> + <-@

-----Original Message-----
From: Nfb-krafters-korner <nfb-krafters-korner-bounces at nfbnet.org> On Behalf
Of Tracy Carcione via Nfb-krafters-korner
Sent: Thursday, June 21, 2018 10:55 AM
To: 'List for blind crafters and artists' <nfb-krafters-korner at nfbnet.org>
Cc: Tracy Carcione <carcione at access.net>
Subject: [Nfb-krafters-korner] Gourds

I have grown birdhouse gourds a few times.  Those are the big, bottle-shaped
guys.
I bought a paddle drill bit that the guy at the hardware store said was the
right thing to cut a bird hole, but it went wild when I tried to use it and
tore my gourd to bits.  Clearly not the tool for me.  I'd be interested to
hear about what are the tools others have used to cut a decent hole in a
gourd.
Tracy







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