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3hockeybros uploaded a new video
(3 weeks ago)
My second slideshow of sunrises and sunsets taken in Tofino and the surr...
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My second slideshow of sunrises and sunsets taken in Tofino and the surrounding area. If you enjoyed this video, click here to see the first one: http://youtu.be/q...
I have a few other slideshows as well that you may visit if you wish: -Birds: http://youtu.be/S... -Landscapes: http://youtu.be/L... -Fireworks: http://youtu.be/a...
Please comment, like, and share!
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3hockeybros uploaded a new video
(1 month ago)
Storm watching and getting splashed at a blowhole in Tofino with a coupl...
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Storm watching and getting splashed at a blowhole in Tofino with a couple of friends. The seas were over 20 feet with wind gusts up to 110 km.
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3hockeybros uploaded a new video
(1 month ago)

A video on how to easily build an effective recycled plastic bottle bird...
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A video on how to easily build an effective recycled plastic bottle bird feeder. I have fed the birds out of many different types of homemade bird feeders, and this seems to yield some of the best results; mainly, I think, because the birds don't have to stick their heads into a hole to snatch a seed (black-oil sunflower-it attracts a variety of birds and fits best with this feeder), meaning that they can easily keep an eye open to any threat. As mentioned, I have built numerous different types of bird feeders, each with its own ups and downs, so I hope to post some more videos on how to make these simple ones, and maybe even eventually post instructions on how to make my bird-selective weight-activated feeders. At the moment, I am a sixteen-year-old bird feeder, watcher, and photographer. I have only ever used bird feeders that I myself built, due to a number of advantages: -It is very cheap-the most I have directly ever spent on one is 0$ -I can build the feeders to whatever needs I require, or try to at least, such as against rain (I get 12 feet a year, mostly wind blown), and stellar jays and squirrels (otherwise they absolutely take over the feeders), among many other challenges. -If the feeders are mysteriously destroyed in the night, I can quickly whip up some temporary new ones or take out some of my old designs that are not yet disassembled. -I can make one with ridiculously huge capacity if I have leave for a couple of weeks. -People constantly comment on my ingenuity related to the subject- particularly toward my weight-activated feeders -Most are built completely out of recycled material. -It is very rewarding to just feed the birds, I know, but to have them eating from something that I built with my own hands and pliers is even more so. -Its fun!
Contents:
Part One: The Main Feeder body-- 00:11 Part Two: The Perches-- 2:16 Part Three: The Hanger-- 4:17 Part Four: The Roof-- 5:35
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