Archive for October, 2008

Attracting Wild Birds to Feeding in Your Garden

Monday, October 27th, 2008

“Attracting Wild Birds to Feeding in Your Garden”

If you want to attract as many wild birds to your garden as possible, it is up to you to provide for all their needs. Fortunately it does not take too much work to attract a variety of beautiful guests to your outdoor ‘hotel’- as long as you know what they’re looking for.

PROVIDING THE RIGHT FOOD

What you want more than anything is to become known as a reliable feeding spot. Wild birds will find several feeding areas that they will visit regularly, by offering a good supply you will make it onto their feeding route. Be patient, however, as they become familiar with your offerings. Some birds may only start feeding in your yard when other sources have become scarce, but if they like it they’ll be sure to return.

Different species prefer different foods so provide a variety of seeds, berries and natural sources of nourishment to attract the greatest variety of birds. You might start with black sunflower seeds, white millet or safflower seeds. Try various seeds to determine what offerings are preferred by the birds in your area.

Provide the food from several sources since each species has a different preference. The ground is an easy place to scatter seeds and will attract small birds like sparrows. Safflower is unappealing to squirrels so putting it on a raised platform that is attached to a pole, your windowsill or a porch railing, will discourage them from stealing it from birds that prefer to eat above the ground.

Other birds prefer a hanging feeder. Place it in a tree or on your home where you can view it easily from inside.

Planting shrubs and trees that provide a natural source of seeds or berries will be a big draw for your yard. Dogwoods have a sweet fruit many birds like and holly will provide nourishment in the winter when the more favored berries are hard to find or already eaten.

OFFERING FRESH WATER

Birds love a fresh supply of water. You can make your offer of water as humble as a large bowl on a tree stump or as elaborate as a pond – your birds won’t care. Moving water will prevent mosquitos from breeding but you can also take care to empty and refill a bird bath to prevent breeding as well.

Winter makes it difficult for birds to find unfrozen water so be sure to use a bird bath with a heater or replace the water as necessary.

NESTING AND PROTECTION FROM THE ELEMENTS

Thick trees like evergreens make a good home, offering protection from predators and harsh elements. Thick grasses and shrubs also provide protection and nesting areas.

Choose plants that can be left to seed and you will be offering both home and food to your little guests – ensuring they will find your yard the perfect home for them and their little ones year after year.

This article on Attracting Wild Birds to Feeding in Your Garden is brought to you by www.backyard-gardening.com

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Planting Rhubarb

Thursday, October 16th, 2008

“Planting Rhubarb”

A vegetable that many families will find interesting and fun to grow, not to mention quite tasteful when mixed with strawberries for a wonderfully baked pie, is your rhubarb plant.

A pie made from tender stalks of rhubarb in early spring has all the deliciousness of an apple pie, and a flavor that the apple pie seldom has without the addition of spices.

You can make use of rhubarb in so many ways that you will not willingly be without it after having found out what can be done with rhubarb. You will consider it one of the garden standbys.

Rhubarb will, like asparagus, grow almost anywhere, and under all conditions, but, to get best results it must be given a deep, rich, mellow soil, and the soil must be kept rich, year after year.

Plant the rhubarb in rows about four feet apart, and two or more feet apart in the row. Three feet would be better, if you are not worried about having enough space in your garden, since old plants make a very strong growth, and cover a large amount of surface.

Rhubarb is a heavy feeder,and quickly exhausts the soil in which it is planted, therefore manure must be used in very liberal quantities, or there will soon be a falling off in the size and quality of the plant. To be tender and delicate in flavor, it must make a rapid growth in the spring.

Cover the roots with mulch in the fall, and work this into the soil in the spring, adding a generous amount of well rotted cow manure, at the same time. Do this as soon as the frost is out of the ground.

Be sure to keep all flowering stalks cut off. If it is allowed to develop seed, the plant will throw all its energy into producing seed, and next season you will likely have a rhubarb plant that has been greatly weakened as a natural consequence.

You can have rhubarb very early in the season by setting a headless barrel over a plant as soon as the frost is out of the ground, and by piling horse manure up around the barrel.

This will help heat up the soil inside the barrel around the rhubarb plant. The young stalks, from such forcing, will be extremely delicate in texture, and provide great flavor and lack the acidity which characterizes the later growth.

This article on Planting Rhubarb is brought to you by www.backyard-gardening.com

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