







🦜 Keep squirrels out, invite the birds in — effortless protection with style!
The 14-inch Wrap Around Squirrel Baffle is a foldable, universal guard designed to protect bird feeders and houses from squirrels and raccoons. Made from durable, powder-coated PVC, it features a slippery surface that prevents climbing and installs easily on poles or shepherd hooks without disassembly. Weather-resistant and built for long-term outdoor use, it’s the essential accessory for any serious bird lover aiming to keep their feeding stations squirrel-free.
| ASIN | B093WMW1FR |
| Best Sellers Rank | 19,527 in Garden ( See Top 100 in Garden ) 34 in Bird Feeder Accessories |
| Brand Name | Jodsen |
| Colour | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 3.7 3.7 out of 5 stars (967) |
| Included Components | Cover, Hook |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 38.1L x 38.1W x 18H centimetres |
| Manufacturer | Jodsen |
| Manufacturer Part Number | SF-LY-046 |
| Material Type | PVC |
| Mounting Type | Hanging Mount |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Protect Bird Feeders and Bird Houses from Pests, Outdoor Use |
| Special Features | Foldable |
| Target Species | Bird,Squirrel |
A**R
Does the job.
Had problems with both squirrels and a rat accessing the bird feeders. This has defeated both. The baffle is both strong and slippery, the rat can't get passed it and gave up after 5 or 6 attempts. Squirrels have tried climbing past it, it tips and dumps them off and jumping onto it with the same result. Several tried over a week or so, the same result each time. My feeder has a very slim pole, I had to pack the fixing with a piece of rubber petrol pipe but half an inch or more and you won't need to. Needs to be 5 feet from the ground. I especially appreciated the spare bolts.
M**M
Pesky squirrels almost beaten
Keeps the squirrels off our feeders
M**W
Totally Unfit for Purpose
I don't know where to start with this. This is not a serious squirrel baffle by any means. Fiddly to put the cone together as it keeps fighting against you. Once the cone has been created, the way it fits the pole is the joke. Followed the video for instructions (none in the package), placed it correctly on the pole but, within 20 minutes it had been blown off the 'bracket' by a SLIGHT breeze. This happened a couple of times on the first evening. Next morning, it was on the ground again, so I replaced it on the 'bracket'. Half an hour later, one of the squirrels came to investigate it. Went up the pole twice, but stopped by the baffle. It went up a 3rd time, a bit braver now, lightly touched the rim of the baffle cone...it fell down. Squirrel did a runner about 4 meters away and came back to proceed up to the feeders as the baffle was on the floor. The issue here is the so-called bracket. it doesn't grip onto any part of the cone, the cone with a big hole in the top just balances on it. It's totally unfit for purpose. What it needs is some grommets or washers to fit the hole or, better still, a total redesign. I get the feeling this wasn't intended as a squirrel baffle and someone has just had a brainwave moment and come up with this usage idea. Total fail!! Arrived 29 Jan, refund requested 30 Jan. At the same time as requesting the refund, I ordered one of the clear domes that can be found on Amazon, a bit dearer but absolutely perfect. It arrived today and it fits tightly and no chance of it falling down without a lot of pressure.
D**S
A Baffle that Baffles!
This is the second one we have bought...not because the first one fell apart but because we had a new visitor to the feeders and not such a pretty one, either...a rather moth eaten rat! Very industrious he/she was too...and emptied the feeders as quickly as we filled them, scaring the birds away. Now....I'm all for live and let live and living eco style, like, but do draw the line at some rather revolting rat taking liberties. I know it probably has mouths to fill and all that but not over keen on a horde of rampaging rodents taking over my pergola and garden bench, thanks! I guess, at least, the owls will have a field day. Anyway....on to the product: The price is great. The cheapest we've found, hence why we didn't hestiate to grab a second one. A little fiddly to fix and hold the thing together...Himself did something with nuts, bolts and washers to get it to fit over the feeding tray but it was easy enough to adapt. So...put it in place, along with other feeders with cages around them...and waited. I did wonder whether these would all work but, sure enough, at the same time as the damn thing always arrived...talk about creature of habit....up the wall it shimmied (marvellous use for rendering on the wall....) the thing found it easy to get up to where it wanted to be....trotted along the pergola to its favourite tray and....stopped....dead....then jumped....and promptly slid off to the ground (sadly, much to mine and Himself's raucous amusement.) Undaunted....back the plucky not so little (build them big up yere in very rural Wales!) beggar came....back up the render...back along the pergola....jumped....and slid off again. At this point, Himself and I and the rest of the family settled down for a night of entertainment (we don't get out much) and, sure enough, back it came....we waited, breath baited....and it ran round and round the metal rungs of the pergola, trying to work out how it could get to those goodies....talk about frustration...I swear you could see it, writ large across its mush! it tried hanging upside down, hanging sideways, doing a kind of one front, one back leg on the rung and one front, one back leg flailing around to try to grab something...anything...but just could NOT get to it. Much aggrieved, it turned its attention to the fat ball feeders. Rubbing its mangy twitching forepaws together, you could see it thinking that this was going to be a doddle! A few bars weren't going to stop Roland the Resolute getting to this delish dish of lard, worms and insects....handed to it on a plate or what? So, off it totters, along the rungs of the pergola, as mentioned before, and leaps onto the feeder. Success! So far, that is....dozy Roger the Dogged, much excited and all agog with its seeming victory, thrust its scabby face into the bars and....got stuck! Yep....sooooo close to the treasure and yet...sooooo far away. It struggled for a while, leaving the bemused and very amused spectators pretty breathless but finally managed to release its head rather suddenly....which meant, once again, it found itself on the ground again! Now, Rupert the Wretched is left foraging for what is on the floor. I swear the birds feel sorry for it as they seem to throw stuff down so it isn't left hungry! All in all...a jolly good buy!
R**C
Does the job but cheap construction
Bought this to replace a broken perpex dome as one of those would have been very expensive. Its quick and easy to construct with just 6 nuts and bolts to turn the two flat black flexible plastic sheets into a cone. The bolts result in a not very neat join near the top of the cone, but that's not noticeable from a distance. (perhaps 8 nuts and bolts would have been better). The way the cone is fixed to bird feeder pole was a disappointment. A tiny clamp is fiited to the pole and this prevents the cone sliding down the pole. The cone is not firmly clamped to the pole so it wobbles around a lot when its windy and sometimes it slides up the pole. Otherwise its seems to be doing the job of keeping squirrels off the feeder so far. Will probably look for something else when it reaches end of life.
M**L
Works well
Easy to assemble and put on bird feeder Seems well made and protects feeder from rats etc
B**R
Works but is not a permanent fix.
Squirrels still managed to gradually shrink its size be eating the rim from underneath. Left untouched for awhile, they managed to chew it away down to half its width. Eventually threw it away and bought a clear plastic anti-squirrel dome.
E**C
I actually use this in a tree to keep my cat from escaping the yard. But it works great. Not sure where the negative reviews are coming from. Basically exactly as advertised.
R**E
Je n’ai pas revu d’écureuil dans mes mangeoires mais ils ont grugé le tour du cylindre (il devrait être en métal).
C**L
It does not fit tightly on Shepard,’s hook pole and it is hard to assemble top screw. We watched the squirrel get over it the feeder after three tries. Not worth the money
G**T
The holes were too small for the bolts - suggest you drill them out. Suggest you use your own Philips screwdriver and use a wrench to tighten the bolts. As others stated the clamp was too big for my bird feeder holder rod. Suggest taping it on. The squirrel cone hole was large enough to fall down past the clamp. I cut a tennis ball to go over the clamp which solved the issue. So far it has been effective for keeping the chipmunk from the feeder.
J**T
This baffle is very minimal. The material is thin, the diameter is on the small size. The clamp is very minimal and will require some kind of spacer to fill in the difference in the size or the baffle centre hole and the pole clamp. I used a a plastic,cut up, honey boodle i found in the recycle bin. The baffle flops around in the wind, this may be design? I have it installed and waiting to see if the dam squirrels will slide off when they jump on it? Here's hopping they do.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
2 weeks ago