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#1
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just about everybody loves mealworms!! i have converted a small wooden bird feeder so just the wrens can get in it to eat them (i just released 3 house wrens). i breed mealworms also so i have much to spare also.
suet for the woodpeckes and many other birds, they love it, audubon has a great suet feeder for pileated woodpeckers, it has a large fin on the bottom so they can have support for thier tail. u can also put out chopped berries, and nail a few oranges to a tree and put out a dish of grape jelly for orioles . don't forget the hummingbird feeders, if you have any with yellow on it, take a little acrylic paint and paint those parts red, red attracts the hummers, yellow attracts the yellow jackets and the venom from a yellow jacket can kill a hummer. no need to buy any pre mixed nector for them, just melt 1 part sugar to 4 parts water, no food coloring unless you just want to color it red until they find the feeder, and disinfect and change the sugar water about once a week, it's okay if ants and other insects go in and drown it actually adds protien they need to the mixture. oh and then i have the feeder for the sparrows, they tend to prefer the cheapest bird seed from the grocery store and they will leave the more expensive seed alone most of the time |
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#2
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In springtime, if we're getting a lot of rain, not many bugs out for the birds to feed their babies, I even put out soaked dog kibble, mixed with scrambled eggs for the starlings. You should see them grabbing hunks of the stuff and carrying it away in their beaks to feed their young.
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#3
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wrensQuote:
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#4
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Those ideas are really cool lol.
Leopard |
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#5
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How do I get rid of the house sparrows? They are eating all my seed and will not let other birds eat.
Leopard |
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#6
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![]() P.S. You could always send them over to Charis' house, as she finds them enchanting. If you want to pm me, I can give you her address. Just post it up by your feeders. The ones that can read can go to her house.
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. Last edited by Jay3; 28th July 2009 at 12:19 PM. |
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#7
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Thanks for the advise Jay3. We set up a bird house (we wanted blue birds) but all we have in our birdhouse is wrenssssssssss (that includes baby wrens).
Leopard |
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#8
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__________________
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#9
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Did a wren really fly into your hand? They are aways flying away at top speed when I get within 10 yards of them. "o" and I just filled up the bird feeders.
Leopard |
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#10
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Yes, he did. The male carolina wren. I used to put out chopped peanuts for my woodpeckers and others, and I noticed this little bird following me around whenever I did this. I looked him up in my bird book and found that he was a carolina wren, and that they love peanuts. Also that they are not particularly hardy in the New England winters, but that they are staying up here year round more and more. So I started to sprinkle some on the roof of a box feeder I had built, just a few feet from the window. He watched me do this, and I knew he could see them there, as he landed there often anyway. He would gobble them up and look for more. That was in the Autumn. During the winter, I always filled the feeders, and left chopped peanuts for my little wren. Come spring, we had long periods of cold rain, then they brought their babies to the backyard. I was afraid they would starve, as with the cold and the rain, not many bugs around, which is what they eat, and too early for the berries they eat. So I started feeding them mealworms. They loved them, and we got to watch as they fed their young. This little guy got so used to me that he would actually sit in my hand and gobble up the worms. His mate wouldn't get quite that close though. When the mealworm feeder was empty, he would come into my dining room, through the open window and hop around on the table squawking at me to let me know to fill the feeder with more worms. They came for a few years like that. I miss him, but the generations that he started still come to our garden. Birds are not that hard to get close to with patience.
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Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#11
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Here he is, my Little Wren.
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__________________
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#12
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That is so cool. That is the same kind of wren we have. I have to put peanuts out for him.
Leopard |
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#13
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__________________
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |
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#14
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We have been buying to many mealworms for my leopard gecko. First a thousand, then two hundred and fifty. As soon as a batch comes in I will put half out for the birds.
Do you own any other pets? Leopard |
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#15
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I used to breed them. It's fairly easy. I wouldn't put them all out at once. A jay or something could come grab them all. When I was feeding my carolina wrens, we had a house wren nesting in the backyard at the same time. They wouldn't let her near the worms. So I put up a little bird dish, like what you would put in a bird cage, and placed it near her bird house. Everyday I put mealworms in it. She would fly down to it, load up her beak with worms, and fly back to the house to feed her babies. It was nice to watch them through the summer. Just put out a small amount at a time.
__________________
Life isn't about waiting for the storm to pass........It's about learning to dance in the rain. |