Many people enjoy the sounds
of birds singing and chirping in their yards. Birds are beautiful to look at,
and they provide many with an appreciation for nature. There are many benefits
associated with attracting birds to the landscape, but in order to experience
these benefits, the birds first need to be attracted.
It is possible to
attract birds to your property by following a few simple design principles, and
by choosing plants for your landscape that naturally attract birds.
Birdfeeders are old staples for those who wish to see birds in their
yards. When using feeders, they should be placed conveniently, and they should
also be large enough to hold two to three days worth of food.
Placing
birdfeeders in various parts of the yard can help attract more birds into your
landscape. However, the birdfeeders should serve as supplements to the various
plants in your yard that provide food and shelter to encourage birds to think
of your yard as home.
The first thing to remember when designing a
landscape to attract birds is that your design should provide shelter to
protect birds from the elements or from predators.
Evergreens are great
in this role, as they often provide plenty of space for a bird to crawl into,
but they are very difficult for predators to penetrate. Additionally, they can
be thick enough to provide adequate and desirable shelter. Evergreen trees and
bushes, moreover, look nice with just about any home, and they are fairly hardy
and easy to take care of.
Other plants that provide good shelter to
birds include other woody plants. Features like decks and birdhouses also
provide nice places for birds to shelter.
The next thing that should be
done is to provide plants that offer a consistent food supply. These plantings
should offer a great deal of food, and produce enough food to meet the birds'
needs, with the help of birdfeeders. Additionally, there should be a variety of
plants that offer seeds and fruits at various times so that the food supply
lasts for an extended period of time.
Holly plants (if you use blue
holly, you will need both a blue boy and a blue girl in order for there to be
any berries), crabapple trees, sunflowers, and other plants that produce
berries and seed are excellent choices. Many of these plants are very
attractive and can be made to look good in any design, besides being a source
of food for winged creatures.
Another landscape principle to keep in
mind while selecting plants that attract birds is to select plants that attract
insects. Most scented flowers attract insects, and this means that your yard
will attract birds that eat insects. Not only are there many beautiful flowers,
like the gumbo-limbo and roses, that attract insects, but these also smell very
nice.
You can have a fragrant yard, as well as one that is really for
the birds. Among your choices for insect-attracting flowers, choose some that
bloom during the spring migrations. Then you will be sure to get birds on their
way through town, headed north.
Finally, there are landscape features
that are not plant-related. These features, other than birdfeeders and
birdhouses, can also mean the difference between a yard bursting with birdsong
and one that is depressingly quiet. These features are water features.
Birds like to have places where they can bathe and drink. There is no
need for a big water feature; a small birdbath or basin is often more than
sufficient. Birds do prefer moving water, so small features that circulate
water, or even water in gently sloping basins or troughs can be very attractive
to birds.
It does not need to cost a lot of extra money to attract
birds to your landscape. There are plenty of discount stores that offer
acceptable birdhouses, feeders, and water features at low costs. Additionally,
if you buy seeds or starts, you can get your plants for less. Birds do not
require anything really special. For the most, part you just need to keep them
in mind if you want them part of your landscape.
Much of the time
attractive plants and features that you would likely have purchased anyway can
be incorporated to make your landscape more pleasing to the ear.
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