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Once your plastic bottle or carton is completely clean, cut a square hole—like a little
doorway—near the bottom of the container. (You can draw the doorway first with a marker and follow the lines when you cut.) |
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File down any sharp edges—these could harm birds. |
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Near the top of the container, carefully make two small holes on opposite sides. Slowly pull some string or cord through the holes. |
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Tie the string or cord with a strong knot. |
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Place some seeds in the bottom of the bird feeder. |
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Hang your feeder. The location should be quiet—close to trees or shrubs to provide
shelter, if possible—and somewhere that allows you to watch.
(Take care to keep the ground underneath your feeder free of seeds—you want to attract birds, not rats!
If you hang your feeder too close to trees, squirrels may steal the food, so hang it about ten feet away.) |
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Clean out your feeder once a week.
(Get rid of all food and bird droppings—moldy food will make your bird visitors sick.
Carefully wash the feeder with soapy water, or make a new one.) |
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Keep a bird field journal and record the kinds of food you use and the number of birds of each species that visit.
(Find a guide to local birds. You can buy very inexpensive guides at your local bookstore, museum, or nature center, or borrow one
from your local or school library.
Using your guide, identify your different bird visitors. Try changing the kind of food you put out to get different visitors.) |
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If your feeder doesn't attract many birds, add a bird bath. Birds love to have water
to drink and bathe in. Use a shallow dish. Put some soil or sand in the bottom to prevent the birds from slipping and add a few stones for birds to
stand on as they drink. Change the water every couple of days. |
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Make your yard more attractive to birds by planting some native plants or shrubs. Lots
of different plants will attract a greater diversity of bird species. |
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Hanging your feeder near evergreen plants is best because they protect birds from predators and harsh winter winds. |
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Buy some grit at a pet store. Birds mix grit with their food to help them grind it and make it
easier to digest. Or, you can provide broken-up eggshells (first you MUST bake the eggshells at 250° for two minutes to kill all salmonella bacteria—salmonella kills birds.) |
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If squirrels visit, put some peanuts or dried corn somewhere far from the bird feeder. This might keep them happy and distracted. |
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Keep cats indoors. They are considered an invasive species because they kill hundreds of millions of birds every year. |
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