Top tips to help your garden birds survive winter
19 November 2022
By Alex James
By Alex James
After benefitting from a mild autumn, the birds in your garden will start to struggle during the winter months that lie ahead. The UK countryside will become bare as natural resources dwindle, but more energy is needed just to keep warm and the short days leave less time to find something to eat.
So what can you do to help? Below you will find some helpful advice and tips courtesy of our friends at the RSPB.
RSPB Wildlife Advisor, Charlotte Ambrose: “Up until now birds have been able to feed on insects and seeds, but the cold weather means they move into our gardens to find refuge. You can make a real difference and improve their chances of survival, as well as being rewarded by great views of wildlife in your garden or outside space.”
Ensuring your garden is filled with food now will also improve your chances of having a successful Big Garden Birdwatch. The RSPB’s annual event runs from Saturday 26 to Monday 28 January 2019. To take part, all you need to do is spend one hour at any time over that weekend noting the number of feathered visitors to your garden or nearby park. You can sign up for this year’s Big Garden Birdwatch from 12 December.
Learn more: rspb.org.uk/birdwatch
So what can you do to help? Below you will find some helpful advice and tips courtesy of our friends at the RSPB.
RSPB Wildlife Advisor, Charlotte Ambrose: “Up until now birds have been able to feed on insects and seeds, but the cold weather means they move into our gardens to find refuge. You can make a real difference and improve their chances of survival, as well as being rewarded by great views of wildlife in your garden or outside space.”
- Make it full fat: Birds need high-energy foods such as suet balls or cakes during the cold weather to maintain their fat reserves to survive the frosty nights. These are excellent winter foods and can be bought or homemade with lard or suet as a fun children’s activity.
- Top seed: Sunflower seeds are also high in fat – the oil content is higher in black than striped ones, and so they are much better. Sunflower hearts (the husked kernels) are a popular no-mess food. Small black nyjer seeds are a favourite of goldfinches and siskins, though you will need a special feeder as they are particularly small. Avoid bird food mixtures with large amounts of wheat, barley grains, split peas, beans, dried rice or lentils. These are added to some cheaper seed mixes to bulk them up but only attract the larger birds such as pigeons and doves. The better mixtures contain plenty of naked oats, sunflower seeds, and suet pieces.
- Save nature while shopping: Some bird food contains palm oil so check with your shop or supplier. Keep an eye out for the ‘Fair to Nature’ label – any seeds which have this label are grown by farmers who put aside at least 10% of their land for wildlife conservation.
- Go nuts for peanuts: Siskins, tits and nuthatches love peanuts but make sure they’re fed from a stainless-steel mesh feeder. This will help stop squirrels and woodpeckers from destroying the feeder to get to the nuts! Peanuts can also contain a natural toxin which can kill birds so make sure you buy them from a reputable trader. Never give dry roasted or salted nuts.
- Spare some scraps: You don’t have to buy food in specially. Kitchen scraps like mild grated cheese, old fruit, cooked rice, unsalted bits of fat, roast potatoes and raw porridge oats will all be gratefully received. Dried fruits, such as raisins, sultanas and currants are particularly enjoyed by blackbirds, song thrushes and robins. Some dogs and cats can react badly to these fruits so please put them out of reach from these animals.
- No thank you! There are some foods you should avoid as they can be dangerous for birds. Cooking fat from the roast or Christmas turkey mixes with meat juices during cooking to make a runny, greasy mixture. This sticks to feathers and stops them from being waterproof. Others to avoid are dried coconut, cooked porridge oats, milk, and mouldy or salted food.
- Fresh is best: Another essential is fresh water for drinking and bathing. Finding sources of water can be hard with freezing temperatures, but there’s a simple trick which will help keep a patch of water ice-free. Float a small ball, such as a ping-pong ball, on the surface of the water and even a light breeze will stop it from freezing over.
- Hide in a hedge: Providing shelter from the harsh weather is extremely important. Plant dense hedges such as wild privet or field maple and you’ll be providing a great place to roost in and shelter from the elements. Letting ivy, holly and hawthorn grow will also give a great source of winter berries for hungry birds!
- Warmth is key: Nestboxes are not just used over the summer egg-laying season – many birds will use them on a cold winter’s night. These boxes are frequently communal with many residents packing in together for extra warmth. The record number of birds found in one box is 63 wrens!
Ensuring your garden is filled with food now will also improve your chances of having a successful Big Garden Birdwatch. The RSPB’s annual event runs from Saturday 26 to Monday 28 January 2019. To take part, all you need to do is spend one hour at any time over that weekend noting the number of feathered visitors to your garden or nearby park. You can sign up for this year’s Big Garden Birdwatch from 12 December.
Learn more: rspb.org.uk/birdwatch
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