Bird Buddy – smart feeder review

Bird Buddy – smart feeder review

I finally received my “smart bird feeder” from a Kickstarted campaign I backed in… January of 2021 ๐Ÿ™‚ I know projects like that take time to materialize, and I’m happy to see it lead to successful production and I now have a unit in my hands.

If you know anything about me, you know how much I love birds ๐Ÿฆ

 

Table of contents

  1. Overview
  2. What’s in the box
  3. Review and observations
  4. Photos of BirdBuddy
  5. Photos captured by BirdBuddy
  6. Repair: chewed cable from solar panel

 

Overview

The initial Kickstarter campaign took place at the very start of 2021. What caught my attention was the AI-backed recognition of bird species, and seemingly “plug and play” nature of the feeder (no need to manually charge the camera every day, and the photos being delivered straight to my phone).

I already put number of feeders around the house, and this felt like a natural addition. And I thought of putting it outside of one of the aviaries (check out my articles detailing the building ofย balcony aviary and porch aviary)ย so our parrots get to watch wild birds on sunny days ๐Ÿ˜‰

Since successful conclusion of Kickstarter campaign and the finalization of production, the product is now available for purchase from their official website:

 

What’s in the box?

Product is packed in a very sturdy and high quality box:

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Everything arrived in perfect shape, and there isn’t really much needed in terms of assembly (outside of attaching the swiveling base if you want to put it on a wall mount):

And a detailed look at the accessories in the set:

Notice that there’s a sturdy string provided in the box. You can lace is under the roof of the feeder and simply hang on a branch, or a hook attached to a wall of a building.

However, I wanted to attach it in a more permanent way, which brings us to…

 

Wall mount

I decided to order a dedicated wall mount, for easy installation. It came in its own box, and while a very simple design, it appears to be very functional. The feederย is simply inserted into the “tube mount”, and no screws are needed to secure it, which makes for quick and easy access to refill or clean. Mount comes with a set of screws to fasten it to the desired surface.

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And this is the spot I decided to place it at:


(photo taken at night)

Which is right outside our balcony aviary

 

Review and observations

I’ll keep this part concise – the setup was simple and didn’t pose any troubles (just make sure to first fully charge the unit), and the feeder meets most of the expectations I expressed at the beginning of the article. I was hoping for it to be “maintenance free” just as all other feeders, outside of simply refilling them with seeds, but this is where I encountered few problems.

Pros:

  • Easy to set-up, lightweight, good quality materials, looks nice,
  • You receive photos of the visitors automatically, with information on the species, statistics on number of spottings and more – this is the magical part of the product, very cool to get such notification onย a phone ๐Ÿ˜‰
  • You can share photos with a community, as well as help refine the AI algorithm by correcting mis-classified birds (*this didn’t seem to always work for me, see below)

Cons:

  • Batteryย efficiency (capacity vs consumption) combined with the effectiveness of solar panel on the top of feeder may not be sufficient to keep it running for long
    • I live in Seattle, and we do have reputation for most of the year being dark and rainy. Unfortunately, right now (November) it appears we already don’t get enough sun light to keep the battery charged on ongoing basis, without requiring additional charging from the wall.
    • Could doubling the area of solar panel have helped? I’m surprised only 1 slope of the roof has the solar cells.
  • The angle of the camera
    • As you can see on sample photos I provided below, the edges of the roof get captured in the photos, which seems a bit… jarring.
  • AI recognition of bird species
    • I’m getting mis-recognized species very often, from a small delta stemming from the quality of image (e.g. Mountain Chickadee vs Chestnut-Backed Chickadee) to jarring misclassification (Yellow-sided Green Cheek Conure vs…ย Hummingbird! ๐Ÿ˜‰),
    • I wonder if there’s going to be an effort to do a new pass on previously classified photos, as the algorithms improve, to help address previous false-classifications,
    • Another good improvement would be providing ability to compare with photos shared by the community to use as a reference when we make a manual disambiguation,
  • Buggy mobile app
    • While I could say a lot of good words about the overall design and visuals in the mobile app, it does have number of bugs. Examples I’m hitting most commonly:
      • Errors when I attempt to fix mis-classified bird – operation to assignย new type fails repeatedly, and such images get stuck in “Mystery visitor” category
      • Issues with search: you need to be typing the full name of the bird as it appears in their database, and searching by provided words doesn’t work (will return expected result: “Mountain Chickadee”, won’t return any results: “chickadee mountain”)
      • “Back” button navigation doesn’t work to close photo we’re viewing,
  • For a “smart” device, I feel like the full potential hasn’t been realized yet – there’s just more that could be done, to appeal to data-driven minds! Examples:
    • Notifications for when seed supply is are running low and should be refilled,
    • Timeline showing activity – top-level view to see when birds visit the most, drill-down per recognized species, etc,
    • Hard-wire kit with further customizability – I complained about the lacking battery/solar panel efficiency, so maybe we could just plug the feeder in? This would open the door to additional opportunities – additional lighting when it gets dark, maybe even low-power heater that could be turned on during winter months?

 

All things considered, I’m fairly happy with the purchase, but… I can’t shake off the feeling that there really wasn’t that much missing to do more about it, to increase usability/reliability greatly. Bit more stabilization for the software, better power delivery from solar panel to accommodate broader variety of environmental conditions, and it would be great.

 

Photos of Bird Buddy

No better way to showcase the product called “Bird Buddy” than with, ekhm, a buddy of mine – Bella! ๐Ÿ’– She’s a great product tester, and – being very opinionated ๐Ÿ˜‰ – can quickly pinpoint any flaws!

She seemed to approve of the feeder, so I went ahead and hung it for wild birds ๐Ÿฆ๐Ÿ•Š๏ธ๐Ÿฆœ

 

Photos captured by Bird Buddy

Of course, Bella was also the first model that I wanted to get some photos of!

 

And here’s couple visitors that have since stopped by the feeder:

 

I’ll update the article as more birdies come for a quick refreshments ๐Ÿฆ๐Ÿ˜‰

 

 

Repair: solar panel charging cable

Update from 12/12/2022:

Looks like squirrels (or… rats?!) exposed an important design flaw: the charging cable connecting solar panel with the camera is routed on the outside of the case.

Andย such protruding curiosity was enticing enough to attract some… teeth. And chewing ensued. Here’s the result:

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Looks like we have some repairing to do…

Let’s start byย splitting the roof open – it should be easy, considering the visible tabs:

Bone tool comes to help and the pieces come apart in matter of seconds:

Next, let’sย strip the wires and get ready for soldering:

Here’s the wire stripped I’m using: wire stripper, 8 inch, self-adjusting, $21.99, see on Amazon.

Quick and easy soldering. I added some electrical tape in addition to heat shrink just to reinforce and it a bit more and make it look like a single wire again.

Now, how do we prevent curious critters from chewing on it again?

Here’s the part that I’m surprised about, and mitigation for original design flaw – instead of routing the wire outside and back in, I decided to keep it contained within the case through-out. Since the roof consists of 2 panels, we can simply drill a hole in the bottom panel, and route the cable through that hole:

You can see that I started with 1 drill size, and then moved to a much wider 1/2″ spade drill bit. The hole needs to be large enough to fit the USB-C connector.

I made sure to clean the shavings thoroughly, before refilling the feeder and putting it back outside.

I actually wondered why wasn’t that the original design… and I came to conclusionย – is the solar panel a simple add-on? If so, having such hole would be undesirable in units without it, for obvious reasons, but considering that they sell both variants, maybe having slightly diverging designs in this aspect would be beneficial…

Well, let’s hope I was unlucky like that, and it doesn’t turn into a common issue.

Now that things are back to working state, I can’t wait to see other bird photos from curious visitors ๐Ÿฆ๐Ÿ˜‰

Comments

2 responses to “Bird Buddy – smart feeder review”

  1. Jennifer Avatar
    Jennifer

    Hi, this is a great review, so detailed and complete. I have a question, I’d like to separate my solar roof into two pieces… do you know if it’s possible? It came in two pieces folded neatly into a box, I put it together and now can’t get it apart. Any suggestions would be welcome, Thanks, Jennifer

    1. Bogdan Avatar

      Hi Jennifer! Great question, but unfortunately I haven’t tried disasembling that part myself, and I had some issues with the feeder… TL;DR – the battery life proved very problematic, with having to recharge it every couple of days, and ultimately the charging cable got chewed out by I think a squirrel ๐Ÿ˜‰

      However, if I were to attempt disassembly, I’d use a very small flat screwdriver to identify where any “tabs” holding the roof together are located, and try lifting them by applying pressure. Using a “bone tool” could help as well to lift the panels and separate them.

      Smart bird feeder is a wonderful idea, but I think the technology fell a tiny bit short in this instance… ๐Ÿฆ

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