Falcons

We are the official exclusive partner for Switzerland of: Flapping-Fixed Wing Falcon and AVES program of the Drone Bird Company. Sales, training and service operations are carried out by us.

Bird pressure is almost everywhere. At airports, in vineyards, plantations, but also in residential areas. The Fixed Wing Falcon had a predecessor, the Robird (Flapping Wing Falcon).

This Bird has been used worldwide for several years against bird pressure at airports and in agriculture. In Switzerland, the world's first trial to scare away crows in a residential neighborhood (Kaiseraugst AG) was conducted in 2019. This trial was very successful. In 2021, the new age of fixed-wing and propeller-driven falcons began. The speed of up to 75 km/h and the silhouette alone brought better and more sustainable results than with the flapping bird. In addition, maintenance costs were reduced by more than 70%, as the short maintenance intervals with replacement of the drive components were eliminated.

Unlike the Flapping Bird, the Fixed Wing Falcon is available for purchase. No matter what budget and application, it just fits.

Flapping Wing Falcon

Fixed Wing Falcon

Fixed.de_1
Fixed-Wing Falcon
Flapping-Wing Falcon

The Flapping Wing Falcon can not be acquired, but rented for a service deployment together with Pilot and Observer

You can purchase the Fixed-Wing Falcon from us.

Crow scaring 2019/20 (Kaiseraugst AG)

In Kaiseraugst, we flew a total of 4x for 3 weeks each. This was in the months of February-March and August-September. During this time we made over 250 flights with the Flapping Wing Falcon. Even "10 vor 10" from SRF was interested and was live.

In Kaiseraugst we flew at 3 different hotspots. Two of them in the high-rise housing estate and one at a recycling yard. Open trash cans and recycling yards are considered as feeding places by the crows.

All flights were recorded. With this data, we were able to perform the evaluation for each flight individually or as a whole. Flight routes, flight altitudes or descents could thus be recorded accurately.