Carolina Chickadee |
Give
it time.
It
might take a week, or two, or even three before the birds in your area see a new feeder
and feel good about visiting it. Try tying a piece of brightly-colored ribbon
to it until the birds find it. Birds are curious about such things, but they're creatures of habit – slow to visit new
things.
Freshness
of seed?
Our
wild birds are attracted by fresh, nutritious seed, and are repelled by seed
that’s stale or dry (although it all looks the same to us). Seed starts to go stale the instant it's harvested. You may save a few
cents getting seed that’s been sitting on a shelf or in a warehouse for a
long time, but you won’t attract birds with it. Rats maybe!
Correct type of seed?
Birds in different regions of the country like
different things. So, if the seed you use was mixed for wild birds in Ohio, California
etc., the birds around here may prefer to try something else first.
Safety for birds?
Songbirds are part of the food chain and are often
hunted and killed (by hawks mainly). So it’s imperative that a feeder has a nearby
escape route for small birds, or they won’t visit. A feeder in the middle of a
big lawn will rarely be visited. A dense shrub or branch about 5 or 6 feet away
is ideal as an escape route. Just make
sure a birdfeeder isn’t within leaping range (about 3 feet) of a cat hiding in
a shrub.
No pesticides?
This guideline’s simple to remember’ Don’t Use
Chemical Pesticides! All birds eat bugs
at one time or another. A bit in one location is OK if there's a stubborn bug problem, but NEVER use a pesticide or weed killer broadly (meaning, on everything). That includes a weed and feed fertilizer. 99.99% of all nestlings have to be fed insects
ONLY. If all the insects (including
worms) are killed, wild birds just won’t stay in your yard.
No water nearby.
Just like us, birds have to drink water regularly.
To fly well, they have to bathe often too. So a good feeder location should be
close to water - at least a birdbath. That applies all year ‘round whether it's zero degrees or 100.
Strange, exotic plants?
Put native plants in your yard. For thousands of
generations, wild birds here have learned when the plants in north Texas go to seed, when
they open pollen-rich flowers and so forth. So the birds’ are genetically
motivated to look for plants that grow here natively, and their activities are
synchronized with the plants. If they see plants from some other part of the
world, they’re confused. So plant natives!
OWEN
YOST, in addition to being a blogger, is a licensed Landscape Architect
emeritus who has lived and worked in north Texas for over 30 years. He is a
recipient of a Lifetime Achievement Award of the Native Plant Society of Texas,
and is a member of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA),
International Federation of Landscape Architects, National Wildlife Federation
and the Audubon Society. His office is at Yost87@charter.net
in Denton.
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