By Beth Sullivan
As the new
year gets off to a really cold start, I have already backed away from
my resolution and done no big trail walks. I am mostly observing out
my window right now.
When we got out to do the AudubonChristmas Bird Count, it got me thinking, again, about birds in the
cold. They amazed me as I trundled, bundled in layers, complaining
about the cold, and these little mighty ones flitted and hopped as I
tried to identify and count them. I realized their entire mission,
on a cold day, was to find food.
Bluebirds will flock to suet. |
Brown Creepers head up the tree. |
A lot has been written recently
about the pros and cons of feeding birds: who does it benefit really?
Do we artificially create a dependency that could be detrimental to
the birds over all?
Winter feeding improves survival
While there are a few, small studies
that suggest feeding the birds can cause some problems, overall, all
studies seem to agree that in this severe weather, the birds have a
far greater chance of survival if we supplement their diet and make
it easier for them to find food.
One of the complaints about
artificial feeding is that the diets we offer are not varied enough.
I think if we take time to observe the birds in the wild, we may be
better able to offer the variety they need, in our own yards where we
can observe them and help them at the same time.
Cedar trees offer food and evergreen shelter to several species. |
Cedar Waxwings will come to the Cedar fruits. |
Out in the wooded preserves, several
species of woodpeckers, Chickadees, Titmice, and Nuthatches seem to
travel together and work the trees looking for hidden insects,
larvae, or eggs. A Downy circles around and under and cruises all
over the tree. The Nuthatches always seem to face down and head down
and around. Brown Creepers, a more uncommon tree trunk gleaner,
always head up and around. Chickadees and Titmice act like clowns
and hang upside down, going out to ends of branches to cover all
angles- all this activity to search for food. I have taken my suet
blocks- plus extra peanut butter mixed with other seeds and
grains-and smeared it on the trunks and branches of trees in my view.
The birds will find it, each in their own manner, and get a variety.
The Bluebirds we have been watching
out at Knox Preserve have been landing on the Staghorn Sumac seed
heads. We watched them pick and choose their seeds until a flock of
Starlings came in and chased them away.
Chickadees hang onto branches and poke under bark. |
Downy Woodpeckers can hang upside down to look for food. |
The same day we watched Cedar
Waxwings land in the evergreen grove and consume the blue colored
fruits of the Red Cedar/Juniper trees and then move to the Bayberry
bushes nearby. It is the female trees that bear the fruit, so if you
want to provide food and shelter in your yard in a more natural way,
plant the females of the Cedars and Bayberries. Robins are
attracted to the same foods, as well as crab apples and Viburnums.
Native plantings - nature's supermarket
As we think ahead to spring, we can
plan some native plantings that will give the birds the varied diet
they will appreciate, that mimics what we find out on the preserves
as we explore. If you have already planted native shrubs and they
have retained berries, you will already be enjoying a greater variety
of winter birds than seed alone will attract. I am sure they will
not complain about sunflower seeds and suet during these really cold
days, and you may get rewarded by some beautiful Blue on a bitter
winter day.
You can help, too
The Audubon Society sponsors this February's Great Backyard Bird Count. The Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology sponsors the winter long, Feeder Watch program. These are great ways for citizen scientists to increase our understanding of the birds nearest to us.
Robins will look for berries when worms are not available. |
Photographs by Beth Sullivan.
No comments:
Post a Comment