12/23/08

January Tips for the Garden 2009

This month I would like to talk “bird feeding.” Celebrate our feathered friends and make it a family affair! It is hard to say who benefits more from backyard bird feeders, the birds or the people who feed them. Some of life’s moments that are more enjoyable include the songs and antics of the birds outside our windows. Watching them is so captivating that it can alter an entire day’s plans, turning a twenty-minute breakfast into a three-hour brunch. Activity at your feeders probably can hold your attention all day with its ever-changing pattern of form and color, from fluffed-up chickadees to sleek cardinals. Often the brightest spot on the winter landscape, with the most activity, is the bird feeder in the backyard. No matter what size yard or garden you have, you can create your own bird haven. All you need to do is provide food, water and shelter. Start with shrubs and evergreens, which not only offer cover during harsh northern winters, but also protect birds from their natural enemies. They also provide safe nesting sites in the spring. Your local nursery can help you choose varieties that are most beneficial for the wild birds.

Whether you are just beginning or greatly expanding your bird-feeding program, give careful consideration to making it easy and fun for the whole family. If the feeders are hard to reach, the bags too heavy for the kids to maneuver, or the birdbath too far from the hose, pretty soon someone will lose patience and object to being involved. Hang different types of feeders at different heights and near enough to your house so you can watch the birds at relatively close range. You can use empty coffee cans and homemade funnels (cut the bottom off a large soft drink bottle) for feeder-filling convenience. Don’t be discouraged if you have just put up a new feeder and the birds don’t flock to it immediately. Because birds recognize food by sight, it can take a while for them to locate a new source. Birds are attracted to shiny, reflective items. Try putting aluminum foil on the ground underneath the feeder, where sunlight can be reflected. If you already have other feeders, put the new one nearby until the birds discover it. Bird feeding activity attracts other species, so when you add a specialty feeder (such as a nyjer feeder to attract finches) to your feeding station, it probably won’t take new birds long to find it. Remember that, for the sake of the birds’ health, it is always important to keep the feeders and the ground beneath then cleaned up of old seed that can harbor disease.

A clean source of water is important for the birds especially in winter. Put your birdbath in an open area, but near some trees or bushes to permit a quick escape if predators approach. Birds will visit regularly once they discover that it is a safe and steady source of fresh water. Open water in freezing weather will attract as many or more birds as a well-stocked feeder! Water actually helps the birds stay warmer in winter. By cleaning their feathers and grooming them with natural oils, our feathered friends are able to help insulate their bodies from cold. You can keep water thawed with a submersible heater placed directly into the water… which is an economical and safe method, as long as you use a high-quality outdoor extension cord to plug the heater into an electrical source. Heated birdbaths are also a good option.

Birds appear to be homeless in winter, which makes people wonder where they go at night. In general, they choose to roost in the same kind of places as they build their nest during breeding season. Some birds will use the same roosting spot every night unless they are disturbed by predators. Depending on the species, birds have different nighttime habits. For example, chickadees and other small feeder birds must be settled in before it gets dark. They usually head for some type of cover, often in the form of evergreen trees. Chickadee flocks fly into these evergreens together and tend to perch near the trunk for added protection from the wind. Nuthatches and some small woodpeckers, such as the downy, often head for tree holes in which to spend the night. Some woodpeckers may even excavate a tree hole in winter just for roosting, and they usually roost singly. A few other birds, bluebirds for example, may also roost in tree holes or birdhouses to conserve body heat. Bluebirds and nuthatches don’t mind a crowd so they may roost communally, particularly on cold nights. The record for the most eastern bluebirds found in one birdhouse at night is 25! That’s a good argument for keeping your birdhouses up all year long! Many birds fly long distances to spend the night in large communal roosts. Crows fly up to 50 miles each winter night, usually finding a roost in evergreens with as many as 100,000 of their closest friends. Grackles, robins, starlings and many herons also form large nighttime roosts. One of the most amazing night behaviors of birds is exhibited by the northern bobwhite. In winter, they join into groups called coveys. These consist of 12 to 16 birds that feed together during the day and gather together at night in a circle on the ground with their tails facing in. The circle is tight, and all the birds are close against their neighbors on either side.

Here’s a small trivia fact about birds. Did you know…for added insulation to conserve heat produced by shivering, birds grow a large number of extra feathers in early winter. White-throated sparrows average about 1,525 feathers in October, and well over 2,500 in February. “Feather light” is not an exaggeration. This huge number of body feathers makes up less than 10 percent of the whitethroat’s total one-ounce weight.

So take time to enjoy the show outside your window in the garden this winter, and we shall talk again soon.

From the garden,
Sandi Hillermann McDonald