- Bird Accessories, Bird Feeders, Squirrel Baffle, Squirrel Proof Bird Feeder, Squirrel Proof Bird Feeders, Uncategorized
Squirrel Proof Bird Feeders for Suet that Really Work!
Feeding wild birds suet can become a real problem if squirrels are present in your yard….they can make suet magically disappear within a few hours!
The new Squirrel Proof Bird Feeders on the market today work really well at deterring squirrels from bird feeders, saving you seed and money! But if you feed suet, there aren’t too many choices available that squirrels can’t manage to steal from.
The Suet Palace is perfect for feeding suet to birds -not squirrels. The grid design will also deny starlings and larger “bully birds” access to the suet. The cover works as a weather guard, protecting suet and birds from the elements, keeping suet fresher, longer.
-
Great Eastern Bluebird Video!
A wonderful Bluebird Video featuring nestlings, dutiful parents, and first flight of the whole brood!
Thanks to these kind folks for sharing their nest cam on You Tube!
-
Wooden Birdhouse Kits, Bird Feeder and Bat House Kits
Wooden Birdhouse kits are available in feeders and bat houses too, and make for excellent projects with kids of all ages.
Be it church groups, scouts, or even school science curriculum, there’s no better way to teach kids about nature, wildlife, and the world around them.
Thanks to The Cornell Lab of Orinithology’s “NestWatch” and affiliated citizen-science projects, teachers are provided with the tools they need to set up nest box trails at schools, through the “Home Tweet Home” partnership with Nature and PBS. Some schools are even monitoring nests as part of a new NSF-funded initiative called “Communicating Climate Change”, aimed at community projects that seek out local indicators of climate change. In Ithaca, NY, Dewitt Middle School students monitor nests in wooden birdhouse kits, and record data such as first egg date, a critical piece of information used by researchers to understand how birds are responding to climate change.
For more information on existing cirricula, or after-school and environmental activities, please visit www.nestwatch.org