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Favorite
Foods for Winter Bird Feeding
Winter is the season
for feeding birds all across North America,
especially in those regions where it gets mighty
cold and snowy. If you are a veteran bird feeder,
you've probably gained lots of insight into the
foods your backyard birds prefer. Perhaps you've
learned through trial and error, or perhaps you
did your homework and read up on the subject.
If you are just getting started in bird feeding,
or if you are frustrated by a lack of success in
attracting birds to your feeders, the first thing
you need to determine is whether you are feeding
the right foods. If you are not giving the birds
what they want, you might not have many birds.
The following foods are extremely popular with
backyard birds all across North America.
Black-oil
sunflower seed
Almost any bird that will visit a bird
feeder will eat black-oil sunflower. Birds that
can't crack the seeds themselves will scour the
ground under the feeders, picking up bits and
pieces. Bird feeding in North America took a
major leap forward when black-oil sunflower
became widely available in the early 1980s. Why
do birds prefer it? The outer shell of a
black-oil sunflower seed is thinner and easier to
crack. The kernel inside the shell is larger than
the kernel inside a white-or gray-striped
sunflower seed, so birds get more food per seed
from black-oil. This last fact also makes
black-oil a better value for you, the seed buyer.
Striped sunflower is still fine (evening
grosbeaks may even prefer it slightly), but
black-oil is better.
Peanuts
Peanuts-de-shelled, dry-roasted, and
unsalted-are bird-feeding's hot new trend, at
least in North America. In Europe, feeding
peanuts has been popular for a long time. Peanut
manufacturers and processors have now identified
the bird-feeding market as a good place to get
rid of the peanuts that are broken or otherwise
unfit for human consumption. Ask your feed/seed
retailer about peanut bits or rejects. Several
major feeder manufacturers now produce sturdy,
efficient tube-shaped peanut feeders.
Woodpeckers, jays, nuthatches, chickadees, and
titmice will readily visit a feeder for this
high-protein, high-energy food. Even cardinals
and finches will eat peanuts.
Suet
Most humans don't want a lot of fat in
their diet, but for birds in winter, fat is an
excellent source of energy. Ask at your grocery
store butcher counter if you don't see packages
of suet on display. No suet feeder? No
problem-just use an old mesh onion bag. If you
want to get fancy with your suet, you can render
it. That is, melt it down to liquid, remove the
unmeltable bits, and then allow it to harden;
this is best accomplished in a microwave oven.
Rendered suet lasts longer in hot weather, and
while it's melted, you can add add peanut bits,
raisins or apple bits.
Good mixed seed
Is there such a thing as BAD mixed seed?
You bet! Bad mixed seed has lots of filler in
it-junk seeds that most birds won't eat. Bad
mixed seed can include dyed seed meant for pet
birds, wheat, and some forms of red milo that
only birds in the Desert Southwest seem to eat.
Good mixed seed has a large amount of sunflower
seed, cracked corn, white proso millet, and
perhaps some peanut hearts. The really cheap bags
of mixed seed sold at grocery stores can contain
the least useful seeds. Smart feeder operators
buy mixed seed from a specialty bird store or a
hardware/feed store operation. You can even buy
the ingredients separately and create your own
specialty mix.
Niger (thistle) seed
Though it can be expensive, Niger, or thistle,
seed is eagerly consumed by all the small
finches-goldfinches, house, purple, and Cassin's
finches, pine siskins, and redpolls. You need to
feed thistle in a thistle feeder of some kind-the
two most commonly used types of thistle feeder
are a tube feeder with small thistle-seed-sized
holes, and a thistle sock. A thistle sock is a
sock-shaped, fine-mesh synthetic bag that is
filled with thistle seed. Small finches can cling
to this bag and pull seeds out through the bag's
mesh. Two potential problems with thistle: it can
go rancid or moldy quickly in wet weather and
uneaten seeds can germinate in your yard,
creating a prickly patch of thistle plants.
Fortunately, this problem does not seem to be
widespread. All thistle seed is imported to North
America, and it is all supposed to be sterilized
prior to entry into this country.
Safflower
This white, thin-shelled, conical seed is eaten
by many birds and has the reputation for being
the favorite food of the northern cardinal. Some
feeder operators claim that safflower seed is not
as readily eaten by squirrels and blackbirds.
Feed safflower in any feeder that can accommodate
sunflower seed. Avoid feeding safflower on the
ground in wet weather; it can quickly become
soggy and inedible. You can buy safflower in bulk
at seed and feed stores.
Cracked corn
Sparrows, blackbirds, jays, doves, quail, and
squirrels are just a few of the creatures you can
expect at your feeders if you feed cracked corn.
Depending on where you live you may also get
turkeys, deer, elk, moose, and caribou. Fed in
moderation, cracked corn will attract almost any
feeder species. Some feeder operators only use
this food to lure the squirrels away from the
bird feeders. Squirrels love corn-cracked best of
all. Whole corn that is still on the cob is not a
good bird food because the kernels are too big
and hard for most small birds to digest. Cracked
corn is broken up into smaller, more manageable
bits.
Mealworms
Most feeder birds, except goldfinches, will eat
mealworms if you offer them. Mealworms are
available in bait stores, or by mail order. Don't
worry, they aren't slimy and gross. In fact, they
aren't even worms; they are larval stage of a
beetle (Tenebrio molitor), if that makes
you feel better.
Fruit
Humans are supposed to eat at least three
servings of fruit every day. Fruit is also an
important dietary element for birds, but it can
be hard to find in many areas in midwinter. Set
out grapes, slices of citrus fruits, apple or
banana slices, and even melon rinds, and watch
your birds chow down. If you want to feed
raisins, chop them up and soak them in warm water
first to soften them up a bit. Offering fruit to
tanagers and orioles is a traditional spring and
summer feeding strategy, but many winter feeder
birds will eat fruit, too.
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