Tag Archive: Bird Feeders

Homemade Pine Cone Bird Feeders

For me one of life’s simple pleasures is catering to the wildlife that frequent our yard. We live in a small, rural town where woodland surrounds our property. It isn’t unusual to see wild turkeys and deer trespassing across the lawn.

Now that Spring has sprung, we look forward to being able to open windows, feel the fresh air, and hear the chirps and chippers of our local and returning bird residents.

Filling the feeders has long been a routine and special time I enjoy with my kids. A couple of weeks ago we were performing the endless task of picking pine cones out of the yard, when I was inspired to make our own feeders. These are easy and cheap to make…and a great craft project for kids!

Peanut Butter Pine Cones: A WILD (Bird) Treat !!!

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Study Shows Which Feeders and Seed Birds Prefer

A three-year study of 1,500 North American citizen scientists shows that birds prefer tube and platform feeders, stocked with black oil sunflower, sunflower chips, nyjer, and white proso millet. The survey was led by ornithologist David Horn, as part of Millikin University’s Project Wildbird.

Some of the study’s conclusions include:

• Tube bird feeders and platform feeders have more visitors than hopper feeders. Tube feeders attract smaller birds while platform feeders are best for larger birds. Whether birds use hopper feeders depends on whether the perches are designed to accommodate birds easily.

• Different seed types attracted different kinds of birds. For example, white proso millet attracts native sparrows and mourning doves. Small finches, including gold finches, prefer nyjer or sunflower chips. Larger species, like cardinals, woodpeckers and house finches, like black oil sunflower seeds.

•Project Wildbird revealed the number of birds visiting feeders is about the same from season to season. What changes are the kinds of birds that appear at different times of the year.

•The 10 most common species visiting feeders were: American Goldfinch; Black-capped Chickadee; Brown-headed Cowbird; Common Grackle; House Finch; House Sparrow; Mourning Dove; Northern Cardinal; Pine Siskin; and Purple Finch.

From 2005-08, Project Wildbird recorded over 20,000 bird feeder observations from 174 individuals in 38 states and 3 Canadian provinces. They observed 106 species and nearly 1.3 million bird visits. Each participant created and monitored four bird feeding stations, with supplied feeders, poles, squirrel baffles and bird seed. Each feeding station was schedule to use a particular seed, with “scientists” making regular 45-minute observations.

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February is National Bird-Feeding Month

National Bird-Feeding Month was created to advance and publicize the wild bird feeding and watching hobby and each February, a new and unique theme is adopted. The theme for 2010 is “Hatching Out – An Introduction to the Wild Bird Feeding Hobby.”

National Bird-Feeding Month reveals the joy of wild bird feeding by surveying basic techniques to create a successful wild bird feeding and watching experience. To join millions of other wild bird feeding hobbyists, you just need a bird feeder, bird seed, and a place from which to watch your birds. “Whether you live in a rural, suburban, or urban environment there are always birds in your neighborhood you can attract to your yard” says Dr. David J. Horn, Associate Professor of Biology at Millikin University. To attract birds to your yard, having the right combination of food and feeders is key to your success.

Horn who recently completed Project Wildbird, the largest study on wild bird seed and feeder preferences in North America, suggests that a great way to get started is to put out a tubular feeder filled with black-oil sunflower seed. “Wild bird feeding is not only for the birds, but also for the people who feed them. Thus, you should place your feeder in a location where you can readily enjoy watching your birds” says Horn.

Horn recommends that you add to your experience with a variety of bird feeders, novel foods, and binoculars to view your feathered friends. “While black-oil sunflower is a popular choice for many birds, you can enhance the feeding experience by adding new combinations of feeders and seed” says Horn. For example, woodpeckers, nuthatches, and titmice are attracted especially to whole peanuts, and Nyjer is popular for attracting goldfinches. Tubular feeders are appropriate for small-bodied birds, but larger birds usually require larger feeders such as hoppers and platforms.

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House Sparrows – Bird Feeder Thugs

If you hang bird feeders, have you figured out which birds are visiting? If you buy your birdseed mix from the grocery or dollar store, have you ever noticed that only a few types of bird visit and hog all the food? If so, it’s very likely that you’re hosting House Sparrows, whose presence in New England and the Northeast is being blamed for declines in some native songbird species. If you are concerned about the welfare of our bird populations, you do not want to feed, house or otherwise encourage House Sparrows!

It may seem cruel to single out certain types of birds to discourage, but House Sparrows (also called English Sparrows) are an invasive species in the US. Brought to this country from Europe in the 20th century, they quickly established large populations that have spiralled out of control, outcompeting native songbirds for food, shelter and space. Along with European Starlings (another invasive bird in the US), House Sparrows are considered a threat to many bird species already at risk due to habitat loss and pollution. In fact, these birds are among the very few species in the US not protected under Federal species protection laws.

Since the mid-1990s, populations of invasive birds have increased significantly. House Sparrows thrive around human habitation, and you can often see them picking at food scraps in parking lots of fast-food joints or big-box stores (where they also find safe housing inside). They are quick to find a residential bird feeder, and will gobble up large amounts of birdseed, leaving little to the less aggressive birds indigenous to New England.

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Green Backyard Birding – Recycle, Repurpose and Reuse

Environmentally friendly backyard birding can be a lot of fun. I like to consider and evaluate green options when choosing a new feature for my backyard birding environment.
Recycle, Repurpose and Reuse

Repurposed Soda Bottle Feeder
Repurposed Soda Bottle Feeder

Bird feeders can be very easily constructed out of repurposed materials. Finding a new use for a discarded soda bottle is a fun and challenging activity for kids as well as adults. Doing this, makes you look at everyday objects in a totally new and creative way.

The easiest reuse of a container for backyard birding is to make a gravity fed sunflower seed or nyjer seed feeder from a soda bottle. An inverted soda bottle with few small holes, wooden dowel or stick and a string or wire for suspension will make a terrific bird feeder. Smaller feeders can be made with water bottles.

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Easy to Build Suet Log Bird Feeder – Fun DIY Project for Kids

A suet log bird feeder is a great way to attract birds that are clinger feeders to your backyard, especially Red Bellied Woodpeckers, Downy Woodpeckers, Hairy Woodpeckers, White Breasted Nuthatches or Black Capped Chickadees.  Suet log feeders are commercially available, …

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Video

How to Feed Birds In The Fall

Tips and Techniques for Fall Bird Feeding including best bird food and bird feeder types, and benefits of feeding your birds year round.
feeding-birds-in-the-fall

Backyard Birding – Preparing for Winter

Invite birds now for the winter

With even the hint of a cool Autumn breeze still weeks away, it’s difficult to think of winter now. However, wild birds’ internal clocks will soon signal them to begin their preparation for the harsh winter ahead. Along with our partner Songbird Essentials, we’ve prepared some expert suggestions for inviting and retaining winter birds in and about your yard during the upcoming long, cold winter.

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How To Video: Make a Kid Friendly Homemade Bird Feeder

This recylcled garden bird feeder is a great DIY project for kids of all ages.  Materials include a repurposed plastic soda or juice bottle, a stick, some string for hanging and bird seed.  Assembly requires adult supervision for making holes …

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World’s biggest feeder shows how to fill the gap for hungry birds

This Guinness World Record™ attempt at creating the world’s biggest bird feeder by volume of food is supported by Natural England, the government’s wildlife advisor, Yara Ltd, who have been involved in the Trust’s game crop trials, and Belmont Seeds. The aim of this record attempt is to raise awareness of the increased problems faced by farmland birds, especially at this time of year when the ‘hungry gap’ from February until late spring, means that many birds struggle to survive through this difficult period.

Farmland bird numbers have halved since the 1970s and many of our once familiar farmland birds, such as the tree sparrow, grey partridge and corn bunting have suffered even more severe declines. The Trust believes that the loss of set-aside, and the increased demand for food production could mean that the situation may deteriorate even further for many threatened farmland bird species.

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