Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Planning On Setting up a Bird Feeding Station In Your Garden?

If you really appreciate how beautiful birds are and would like to look at them up close, you do normally need to learn the kind of techniques that the birdwatchers use - making themselves unobtrusive as they get close to birds that they watch. If you don't have that kind of patience, there's a great of alternatives for you - turn your garden into a bird feeding paradise. You will see them come, flutter about your garden, and you'll be right there in your home watching everything.

You mustn't think that the birdfeeders you put out are a primary source of food for your little winged friends. Birds need a variety of food groups that they can only come by out in nature. What you provide in your garden can be a much-needed source of fun food. So basically, to successfully create a bird feeding area in your garden, you need to put out foods that they wouldn't normally find out in the open in your area.

Here are a few tips on how you would set your bird feeding carton out.

Try to make it easy on the little birds. Don't just put one large bird feeding station out there. When the big birds congregate there, the little birds won't know how to get in. Try to disperse all activity by setting out half-dozen theaters all over your garden. You have lots of bird activity all over there, and there'll be plenty of room for everybody.

If you happen to notice, birds can be very messy feeders. Not only do they completely ruin a feeder after a while of pecking away there, they'll leave the entire area scattered with seeds and crumbs. That's not typically the way to keep a beautiful bird feeding garden. So be sure to vacuum these crumbs up every day.

You probably need to take your feeders out and clean them under hot water at least once a week. If you find that there's a dead bird there sometimes, use disinfectant and thoroughly wash everything.

If you're planning on installing a birdfeeder, you need to make sure that it's safe for the birds. There should be no hiding places for cats or anything anywhere around. You really need to try to think like a bird. If any bird flying past you garden feels that the birdfeeder you've set up is close to a hiding place that a cat might use, it'll not even bother.

If you're trying to cater to the widest possible audience, choose black oil sunflower. They are a favorite.

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