Is it possible to get Blue Jays to stop singing?
Birds may be natural songbirds, but they’re no match for, well, the Byrds – or the Yardbirds, Eagles, a Flock of Seagulls, or even non-avian-named bands. Whatever your taste in music, you can get that blue jays probably won’t match it if the volume is turned up loud enough.
What causes Blue Jays to lose their balance?
While smaller, lighter birds should be fine, larger bully birds such as blue jays will be too heavy, making the bottle start to spin, causing them to lose their balance. Blue jays can sometimes be picky about the type of seeds that they choose to eat. For example, they tend not to like safflower.
Why are Blue Jays considered to be bullies?
Blue jays may be “bully birds,” but like most bullies, all it takes is someone bigger coming along for them to cower in fright and back off. In the wild, owls fill that niche nicely.
How often do you use BeatBuddy for gigs?
The answer to that is definitely yes. I do it every week. I do recommend a separate volume pedal for it, though. Some of the kits/songs are at different volumes than others. If you have a song using something like Pop 8th’s with the rock kit, them move to the same thing with the cajon kit, you won’t be able to hear the cajon kit at the same volume.
Can you use BeatBuddy to play Static beats?
Listening to static beats is terribly boring…if you compose dynamic tracks to fit your music I could see it being right for certain small gigs…e.g I had my drummer play Cajon at an acoustic session with our bass player and it was great…I would see the Beat Buddy filling in nicely in this capacity for this type of a gig…
Do you need a separate volume pedal for BeatBuddy?
I do recommend a separate volume pedal for it, though. Some of the kits/songs are at different volumes than others. If you have a song using something like Pop 8th’s with the rock kit, them move to the same thing with the cajon kit, you won’t be able to hear the cajon kit at the same volume. A real live drummer is definitely a value-add.