Backyard Bird Feeding 101
Inside: Attracting birds to your backyard can be fun and relaxing. Writer Patsy Reiter reveals four tips in her guest post.
Throughout the year, I take great care to feed my variety of feathered friends. Summer is the busiest as many different species fly in and then depart when autumn arrives. Below are some ideas on how I have made my yard bird-friendly. I’m not an expert, but these applications work for me.
1. An abundance of trees and bushes is wonderful as birds like good nesting sites and most species return to the same area year after year.
2. Water and food source.
3. Colorful perennials and annuals attract hummingbirds, butterflies, and bees!
4. Consistency.
I personally fill two bird baths, one in the front and one in the backyard. Besides drinking from these, the birds like to take baths. Some weeks in the summer, I’ll rinse the bird baths twice during the day and fill with fresh water.
I keep my feeding station in the same spot, under a pine tree. I’ve had several hanging feeders, but the nocturnal animals such as raccoons tear them down. I’ve given up on that, but I do hang a small suet feeder and that remains in position.
I toss together a songbird country seed mix with black-oil sunflower seeds. I also make my own hummingbird nectar. One part sugar to four parts water, boil then cool, and fill a hanging feeder. Hummingbirds like red, so you’ll notice most feeders sport that color. I change the liquid every three to four days and wash the feeder to ensure mold doesn’t form. There are times mid-summer that I’m filling the feeder every day. My feeder hangs in front of my kitchen sink window, and it’s so much fun watching the little beauties.
Thistle seed for finches is expensive, so just once in a while I’ll purchase a small bag. I find that the finches dip into the oriole’s grape jam. Just drop a large spoonful of jam onto an orange lid or plate. Orioles are attracted to that particular color and also love oranges. There are liquid oriole feeders on the market, but I keep to simpler in-home items.
Sometimes during the week, I treat my feathered friends to my own homemade mix—old bread dipped in leftover grease from bacon or red meat. I break it up, toss it out in the yard, and it’s quickly retrieved. Since there is an abundance of flowers, fruits, and grains for birds during the growing season, they are well fed.
In winter months, even after the snowbirds have headed south, I continue to feed my feathered friends. The blue jays and cardinals make a colorful display on a blanket of snow. I have a special fondness for mourning doves that seem to settle at my place all year.
Tip: Unsalted peanuts are a favorite of blue jays, but watch out for the squirrels as the nuts will disappear quickly.
My biggest tip? Sit, relax, and enjoy our feathered friends.
Are you a backyard bird enthusiast like Patsy? Tell us about it in the comments.
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Patsy Reiter has been writing stories for children and adults for over fifteen years, with five credits in two e-zine magazines and a piece in the Genesee County Family Resource Guide. A Michigan native and member of SCBWI-MI and American Christian Fiction Writers, her inspiration is fueled by her grandchildren and an offbeat sense of humor. In 2009 she won first place for her e-zine story “The Necklace.” School visits and opportunities to inspire children are high on her agenda. She enjoys spending time with family and friends where ideas consistently sprout. Patsy has just completed her first inspirational novel.
Cornfields, Stump Gardens, and Other News Fresh From the Farm
Inside: My field of dreams, when life gives you a fallen tree, make a stump garden, and observations from the Katy Trail.
My Field of Dreams
Call me a child of the corn–though not in a Stephen King sort of way. But when you grow up on a farm in the Midwest, chances are you played in a cornfield. You’ve had the pleasure of running through the rows, hiding and seeking, suffering the little cuts and nicks from the leaves as you made your escape. Maybe you were like me and fell asleep to the sweet smell of ripening corn carried on the gentle summer breezes coming through your window. No perfume could ever rival that scent! Maybe you watched, as I did, the small sprouts emerge in the soil like stitches on a dark quilt and measured your height, from one week to next, against the rapidly growing stalks until that “high as the corn in July” moment when you knew you’d never catch up. And maybe, like me, you were sad when those vibrant green leaves turned pale in the short chilly days of autumn, knowing your field of dreams would soon end. Yet remembering still, there’s always next year.
When Life Gives You a Fallen Tree, Make a Stump Garden
We’ve had this fallen tree at the end of the yard for longer than I care to reveal. Way back when a wet autumn and stormy night resulted in an uprooted tree, and after a frustrating day of cutting logs and limbs, a huge portion of the trunk remained, as well as the stump upended on top of the hole it had once occupied. Last summer I had a vision for a garden but little time to make it happen. Plus I wasn’t sure how to make it work. Mom wasn’t available to help. Enter the summer of 2017. I shared my vision–and she shared my excitement. After a trip to Sugar Grove, our plant place, we began to fill in a few plants. Then she’d think of something else that would work well in this nook or that cranny, and the stump started taking shape.
Some of the plants in this early picture are caladiums, moss roses, sweet potato vines, purslane, sedums, grasses, and silver mound. Since then we’ve added begonias, Kong coleus, and salvia, and probably a plant or two I’m not remembering. Now, weeks later it has filled in and become quite the centerpiece of the yard. Look for a post on building a stump garden in the near future.
Observations From the Katy
Why would anyone willingly wake up at 3:48 in the morning, get dressed, grab a water bottle, and head out the door by 4:15? To go for a walk on the Katy Trail in the cool of the morning–or, in Hubs’ case, to go for a bike ride. For me, there’s no better way to spend a Saturday morning, deep in conversation with my daughter Emily as we walk her dog Odin on the Katy.
For those of you not familiar with the Katy, it’s a rail trail–the longest in the nation, actually–that extends across Missouri. If you like to walk or cycle or just enjoy nature, it’s a fun destination. For history buffs, the east side of the trail offers glimpses into Lewis and Clark’s adventures as well as some Daniel Boone and family history. It’s a great place to visit on this good green Earth we share!
How did your week go? Tell us about it in the comments.
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Gardening Advice from a Thirty-year Greenhouse Veteran
All Winding Roads Lead to Nausea
Next week’s coming attractions: Help! The Weeds Have Taken Over my Garden, Backyard Bird Feeding 101
Renovating Strawberries the Simple Way
Inside: Renovating strawberries isn’t difficult–and you’ll be glad you did! Here’s what to do once the harvest is over.
You’ve picked berries until you’re seeing them in your sleep, but finally–finally!–the harvest is over. The strawberries are happily tucked into their frozen home, awaiting their culinary future. So, what to do with that strawberry bed?
Maybe yours looks like mine. Where did those weeds come from, anyway? No matter, it’s time to take action. Time to renovate.
Take courage! It’s not easy taking a weed eater to a carpet of lush green leaves, but your plants will come back stronger than before. How do you actually go about renovating strawberries? First locate your spent plants. Those are the ones with stems that look woody and leaves that are brown around the edges–plants that didn’t yield as many berries. Older plants. For these I chop the leaves and the crown right down to the soil line.
Next I find plants that have strayed past their boundaries–for example, those that are growing on the edge of the bed and into the yard. I keep more plants than others do, but a good rule of thumb is to leave four to six inches between plants and twelve inches between rows. I also take out the weeds.
For the plants I decide to keep, I chop the tops off, making sure to leave the crown. What’s the crown? The part that extends about an inch above the roots and which the stems grow out of.
Here is what the bed looks like after a good haircut. I followed the renovation with an application of my homemade fertilizer–weed tea. (More on that in another post.)
Notes on Renovating Strawberries
- Plants produce best when young, which is why you thin out the older ones.
- The best time to renovate is after the strawberries have stopped producing. They are semi-dormant after the harvest.
- How often should you renovate? For June-bearing varieties, once a year. Two to four years for day neutral and everbearing.
- Continue watering your bed, making sure it gets about an inch of water per week during the growing season.
You might be wondering, is it really necessary to renovate strawberries? Actually, you don’t have to do it. You can grow the berries as annuals and simply pluck out the plants at the end of the season. Or you can remove the old plants and replace with new ones. But after learning how simple it is to renovate strawberries, I hope you will give it a try. Your plants will thrive!
To renovate or not. What’s your opinion? Leave us a comment.
Related posts: My 3 Essential Tips for Growing Strawberries
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Happy Independence Day!
“We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”
–From the Declaration of Independence