I put out a feeder five years ago. Now I have 28 species on my yard list. Cardinals. Blue jays. Woodpeckers. Warblers during migration. A Cooper’s hawk that hunts the feeder. It’s a soap opera. Here’s how to build your own.
Food: The Foundation
Different birds want different food. Black oil sunflower seeds attract the most species. Nyjer for finches. Suet for woodpeckers. Fruit for orioles. Mealworms for bluebirds.
I started with sunflower. Added suet in winter. Oranges in spring. The variety brought variety.
Water: The Magnet
Birds need water year-round. Not just drinking. Bathing. Preening. Cooling.
I have a simple birdbath. Shallow. Two inches deep. I change water daily. In winter, I use a heater. The birds come even when it’s freezing.
Shelter: The Safety Factor
Birds won’t stay where they feel exposed. Shrubs. Trees. Brush piles. Places to hide.
I planted native shrubs. Serviceberry. Elderberry. Dogwood. Food and shelter combined. The birds noticed immediately.
Native Plants: The Long Game
Native plants host native insects. Insects feed baby birds. Even seed-eaters feed insects to chicks.
I replaced some lawn with wildflowers. Coneflower. Black-eyed Susan. Milkweed. The insect diversity exploded. The bird diversity followed.
The Cat Problem
Outdoor cats kill billions of birds annually. I keep mine inside. It’s non-negotiable.
If you can’t keep cats in, don’t attract birds. The contradiction is too cruel.
The Honest Truth
Backyard birding is slow magic. First few weeks: nothing. Then one cardinal. Then two. Then diversity.
Patience. Consistency. The birds will find you. And once they do, they keep coming.