Eyebrook Wild Bird Feeds

Eyebrook Wild Bird Feed, Wild Bird Food and Wild Bird Feeders

 
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Feeding Guide

Many people like to supplement their birds' diet with extra food - especially in the winter. This can be a real life saver in harsh weather. What benefits the Wild Bird Feedersbirds also benefits the human inhabitants of the house, by the addition of beautiful wild creatures and hours of entertainment. There is also an important knock-on effect for the organic gardener - birds will get used to searching for food in your garden and will search for greenfly, caterpillars and snails during the rest of the year.
The main questions that are asked about feeding are:

  • When?
  • Where?
  • What?

When?

Research suggests that October is the one month of the year when nature provides sufficient food and gardens become quieter. The need for supplementing feeding gains importance from November through the winter period to early April when the birds disperse to their breeding grounds. From early May feeding activity intensifies, increasing steadily to the end of September. Feeding activity in our gardens will vary with the availability of natural food supplies and the weather. When to feed has been a continuousWild Bird Feeders question for a long time, but due to the above facts the answer is all year round. The BTO (British Trust of Ornithology) recommends all year round feeding.  Mortality rates for Greenfinch peak in April/May when traditionally people stop feeding. Provision of supplementary food will allow adult birds to give all the natural foods they can catch to their young. Different species may visit at different times of the year. This coincides either with the natural availability of food or adverse weather i.e. cold and snowy or hot and dry. If the appropriate foods are available then the birds will make use of them when they need to.

Where?

Different species of birds have different feeding habits. Hanging food is ideal for members of the tit family, so using a peanut dispenser, of which there are numerous designs, is fine. Site it high enough up so that cats can't get at it. A good idea is to put it near to roses or other shrubs where you may have trouble with greenfly or caterpillars - they will be found too! If the food is too exposed, the birds may be in danger from sparrowhawks, so it is best to provide cover nearby, like trees or hedges. Don't site the food near nest boxes, as the busy atmosphere will put the birds off nesting. Bird tables are suited to most types of bird and have the benefit of being off the ground so Wild Bird Feedersother foraging animals like animals like mice and rats can't get at it. A roof to the bird table helps to keep rain off but is not essential. Don't be tempted by 'the rustic look' - this makes it very easy for a cat to climb, and birds rarely have success if they nest in one of those quaint bird tables that have a nest box attached - they are just too busy. Many birds prefer to eat on the ground, so put the food on the lawn - well away from shrubs which can be hiding a cat. Don't put too much out at once - if it's still there when night comes, the rodent population will flourish! If you have old trees, you can smear fats and fix nuts into crevices in the trunk, which nuthatches, treecreepers and woodpeckers adore. Fresh water should be provided at all times, in a shallow container so birds can drink and bath without the danger of drowning. If the bird bath is on the ground or in the form of a pond, then other animals, such as hedgehogs will use it and it is important to have sloping sides so that animals can get in and out.

What?

High energy foods, various nuts and seeds. Soaked bread (white or brown) - dry bread swells in the stomach. Leftovers, e.g. cake, cooked rice etc, areWild Bird Feeders fine, but no spicy or salty foods, or 'gone off' foods. Apples, cut in half and put on a table or the ground are excellent for blackbirds and robins.

Quick Reference Wild Bird Feeding Guide

 
  Mixes Peanuts Sunflower Niger Fatballs
Blackbird

     
Blue Tit    
Chaffinch      
Coal Tit      
Dunnock      
Great Tit    
Greenfinch  
Robin      
Siskin    
Starling    
 

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Rectory Farm, Great Easton, Market Harborough, LE16 8SN

Tel: 01536 770771  e-mail: rectoryfarm@eyebrookwildbirdfeeds.co.uk