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Attracting Birds to your Yard or Garden from Schmeg.com

Schmeg  Home Improvement  >  Attracting Birds (part 1)
 
Making your Yard Appealing to Birds:

  

Of all the creatures around us, birds have a special place in our hearts. Their songs brighten the mornings, their plumage delights the eye. Their comings and goings herald the changing of the seasons. As more and more of us live in urban and suburban surroundings, birds provide a welcome link with untamed nature. While most backyards are visited by at least a few birds, it's not difficult to entice many more to stop by, perhaps even to set up housekeeping for a season. If you like to garden, you may find yourself creating a backyard habitat as attractive to a wide range of fascinating creatures as it is to you.

In this How-To Guide, we'll discuss the basic needs of birds and how you can satisfy them in your landscape.

THE NECESSITIES OF LIFE-
Birds, like all animals, require food, shelter, and water to survive, and they are more likely to frequent places that provide all three rather than just one. The specific nature of these necessities varies greatly from species to species, place to place, and time to time. Take food, for example. Some birds, such as bluejays, eat a variety of insects, seeds, and fruits, but most birds have limited diets. Finches and grosbeaks are primarily seed eaters, mockingbirds and waxwings prefer berries, wrens and woodpeckers eat mostly insects, and hummingbirds drink nectar. Bird diets often change with the seasons. Bluebirds eat moths and other flying insects in the summer but switch to berries in the winter when insects are scarce.

Given this diversity, it is important to know what birds frequent your region and something of their particular needs and preferences. Local nature centers and County Extension agents are excellent sources of information. Rare is the town without a dedicated and knowledgeable bird lover; frequently there are a whole group of them. These people are usually more than happy to assist novices who share their passion. If you can't locate them otherwise, ask at your local library.

FOOD-
You can attract a lot of birds simply by providing a well-stocked bird feeder year-round. The most popular bird foods are sunflower seeds and suet, but offering additional kinds of food may attract even more birds to your yard. Here are some desirable ones.

Sunflower seeds
These are particularly popular with chickadees, cardinals, nuthatches, titmice, finches, and grosbeaks. Buy the smaller, black-oil type, rather than the striped sunflower seeds kids eat in great quantities. They are cheaper, smaller (easier for small birds to handle), and more nutritious.

Millet
These tiny round seeds are inexpensive. Ground feeders, such as doves, juncos, and sparrows, find millet attractive. Cardinals, pine siskins, and purple finches, as well as some waterfowl, also eat millet.

Safflower seeds
If your feeder is overrun by squirrels, crows, or grackles, try safflower seeds, which are more expensive than sunflower seeds but unappealing to these critters. Cardinals are especially fond of them.

Thistle seeds
Also called Niger seed (some of it comes from Nigeria), these tiny black seeds are favored by a variety of finches, juncos, and indigo buntings. High in oil and protein, thistle seeds are also expensive.

Corn
Large birds, such as bluejays, crows, and various fowl (ducks, wild turkeys), eat whole or coarsely cracked corn. Finely cracked corn appeals to mourning doves and other medium sized birds. It's inexpensive, and the whole and coarse-cracked kinds, which don't readily absorb water, can be scattered on the ground.

Suet
Of course, suet is animal fat, not a seed, but suet is frequently provided at bird feeders during the winter to attract woodpeckers, nuthatches, chickadees, and other birds. Encased in a simple basket of vinyl-covered wire, suet can be hung from a feeder or tree; attach the basket firmly lest raccoons appropriate
it.

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