Friday 6 December 2013

Attracting Winter Birds and Bird Feeding


In this article we discuss the different methods for attracting and keeping birds around during the winter months.
The three main things one needs to provide to keep birds during the winter are food, shelter and water. But why feed birds during the winter? Winter brings a change in the availability of natural food. Insects become dormant and are unavailable to most bird species. While woodpeckers, nuthatches, and other insect eaters can pry grubs and hibernating beetles from under tree bark, some others are more dependent on the availability of seeds, fruits and nuts, such as finches. Most birds supplement the natural foods that are available by visiting bird feeders for seeds and suet. This is especially true when a storm hits and their natural food becomes buried beneath the snow. As well, the days are becoming shorter and this reduces the amount of available time that the birds can forage for food, severely limiting the overall food intake per day.
There have been many questions presented on the effects of winter bird feeding: “Will the presence of artificial feeding stations disrupt the migratory urge of some birds leaving them victims of the cold weather they cannot handle?” Although this is a complex question and answer, most available data suggest that the effects have not been harmful, but have had the opposite effect. If a bird is not well enough to have migrated south (possibly due to an injury or some natural migratory cue not being right) and is caught in a sudden snowfall or storm, the bird could probably survive at a feeding station and make it through the winter. This has resulted in unusual overwintering of some species of warblers that have survived at suet feeders. Since the early 1980's there has been an increase in wildlife awareness, causing more people to erect winter bird feeders. As a direct result several species that were on their northernmost distribution could overwinter successfully. Many studies have shown that several species of birds have extended their ranges northwards owing to the availability of feeding stations.
Feeding birds during the winter is a great responsibility, and I want to stress that the birds will become dependent on you as a food source, occasionally at the expense of feeding elsewhere. As a result, one should not stop feeding during the winter months, from October through the end of April to early May, with late winter, from February on, being the most difficult period for the birds. It is also important that one fills the feeder in the morning so that the birds have sufficient time to feed during the shortened days. If you were the only person providing food to birds during those months and that food source disappeared, many birds could perish from starvation if they were not able to find a suitable food source quickly, which can often be difficult during severe winter storms. While this is my personal view and that of many others, there have been recent studies that suggest that stopping food during the winter is not detrimental to the birds. The survival rate of sunflower seed fed birds was twice that of birds that obtained all their food from the wild. While species like finches and sparrows, which do not cache any food, have no reserve food supply to help them if food abundance drops or if there is bad weather for a couple of days.

Providing Shelter

One error that I have found people making is placing a bird feeder in their grassy oasis of a backyard. The foremost thing one needs to keep birds coming back to your garden is providing a place to perch and hide from predators and from bad weather. Without providing a few trees or shrubs in your yard near your feeder, one probably cannot keep the birds coming back. Evergreens are crucial to many birds in winter because they shield them from harsh winter winds, subzero temperatures, falling snow and freezing rain. They also provide protection against predators, like cats that might patrol the feeders. You could remember to discard your used Christmas tree into your backyard and the birds can use it as an extra hiding spot and shelter. Or collect the neighbourhood’s trees to provide more available cover. One could tie them to fence posts or set them in their traditional tree stands. The Christmas trees will be most effective if they are placed close to the feeders, and the trees will remain green right through the winter.
Cover, where birds can quickly flit into to hide from predators or use just for a resting place, can be in the form of deciduous trees or bushes, tall grasses, or a brush pile of discard twigs and branches. The latter is useful if one does not have sufficient cover nearby and wants to provide some quick hiding and perching spots.
Shelter can also be in the form of nest boxes, or special roosting boxes. Nest boxes used for breeding during the summer often get used as seed caches and for night time roosting sites.

Providing Water

While water is the least important of the three things I am discussing it can make a difference to the number of birds visiting your feeders. While we often think birds do not need open water once the snow has fallen, this is really not true. First, there is often a critical transitory period when there is no snow on the ground, yet all the puddles and small streams have frozen over from the cold. What do the birds do then? They must fly to a large open water source, like a river or lake, but this can be quite a distance from your feeder and the birds might decide to stay with a feeder that is closer to the water. Secondly, snow is extremely cold and we all know how much snow we have to melt to get a cup of water. With birds, eating cold snow requires, and takes away, energy through the melting process. This is a big waste of energy when the birds are trying to stay warm in frigid conditions.
The easiest way to provide water is by maintaining your bird bath year round. This might mean filling the bath several times a day, which may not be practical for most people who work all day. The best method is to have a heated bird bath. Although a bird bath heater can be quite costly initially, they quickly redeem their cost when you have a line up of birds waiting for a drink because there is not enough room around the bath. Heaters are completely safe, but one should make sure they have automatic shut off, or heat cycling on/off, features should the bath go dry (this might happen on windy days when evaporation rates are higher or if there are too many birds drinking from the bath). The plugs must be attached to a grounded (three pronged) outlet to prevent the possibility of electrocution. One concern with heaters is that some come with the heating element uncovered. Even if yours has the element covered with a protective screen I would suggest using a piece of shale overtop the heating element that will prevent any birds from accidentally burning their feet. The birds will perch on this warm rock, especially the Mourning Doves.

Feeding Stations

When choosing and sighting your feeders, it is the welfare of the birds that should be foremost in your planning and not your viewing enjoyment. There are many types of feeders and it is a good idea to use several types in your yard, and have a squirrel guard on the pole.
The most basic feeder is the ground itself. Many birds, such as juncos and grouse, prefer ground feeding. However, throwing seeds on the ground can be wasteful as they will get buried under snow. Seed could be placed under evergreens sheltered from snow, or you could just let the birds on the feeders scatter the seed onto the ground. A note of caution, seeds on the ground not only attract squirrels but the feeding birds attract the neighborhood cats as well.
Some people make their own feeders out of meticulously cleaned bleach bottles, milk cartons or from any number of fluid jugs, such as those that hold ‘spring water’ or windshield washer. But make sure you carefully clean out all residues if you use anything that might have a toxic residue. Plastic soft drink bottles can be used. Such feeders are not only cheap, they are useful as satellite feeders to try out new types of seeds.
Pole feeders, preferably with a squirrel baffle, are the easiest to install. The poles come in sections — with the bottom section hammered into the ground. To the top of the pole can be attached a platform or other type of hopper feeder, or other finger poles can be attached and feeders hung from them. The feeder must be at least 1.5 m (5 feet) above ground, preferably more, to prevent squirrels from jumping up onto it. The pole should also be at least 2½ m (8 feet) from any jumping surface, like tree, fence, building or deck, as these can provide jumping sites for the squirrels who think nothing of an 8-foot jump.
Other types of feeders include window shelves or feeders, and hanging feeders that can be attached to the soffit of your house or to a tree branch or pole. The advantage of the hanging feeders is that they can act as supplements to your platform feeder and, more important, each can be used to hold a specific food to attract specific species (see section 2 on foods). In this way, a species, such as goldfinch, can have its own feeding stations. Tube feeders are excellent for holding niger seed for finches. Hanging feeders with two or more compartments are also available, so that a mixture of seed types can be offered in the same unit, attracting different species to the same feeder.
There are also counter-weighted hopper feeders for those who are having trouble with squirrels. These feeders are weighted and lightweight birds do nothing, but a heavy squirrel will cause a door to come down over the feeding ports, preventing them from cleaning out all of the seed. Some feeders are designed to look like log cabins, country stores, and so on. To the birds, these designs do not mean anything, so pick your feeder for its utility, not its cuteness.
If your newly erected feeders are not used immediately, do not be dismayed. If the birds are not in the habit of visiting your yard, it may take them a few days to discover them. The birds will be the best advertisers for your feeders. Once one bird has discovered a feeder, others are sure to follow. The more species using your feeder, the more species they will attract. How long they stick around will depend on how well you have sited the feeder, types of seeds you have chosen, and if there is sufficient cover nearby.
One important note. Feeders and the ground must be cleaned regularly.
Droppings can accumulate and contaminate the food and feeders. Birds could then be more prone to disease transmission. As well, wet food is not eaten by birds. Food that has become wet in rain storms, or a thaw period, begins to decompose. This not only clogs your feeders, and makes it look like no one is eating the seeds, but could kill the birds. Moldy, rancid food could be eaten by birds, who do not have a good sense of smell, and die of food poisoning. In the spring, or when a warm period occurs during the winter, please rake up all the seeds and hulls and place them in a secure area, preferably the compost bin, where birds cannot get access to it.

Foods to Feed

While there are many books on feeding birds in winter I will go over a few basics. Depending on the types of birds you would like to attract you can buy your main seeds in bulk, preferably from a feed store like Kennedy Wild Bird Food since they tend to give the best prices. I would suggest, that one buys from a selection of black-oil sunflower, niger seeds, whole peanuts, and suet. These can then be placed out in whatever quantities that the birds will eat in one day.

Sunflower Hearts

This is the most favoured of all the seeds, and if one only wants to feed one type of seed this should be it. It can be easily dispensed in any hanging feeder, on the ground or on a platform feeder.
There has been much discussion over the difference between striped and black-oil sunflower seeds and their benefits/disadvantages to birds. Through my experience it is more of the advantage to you, the consumer, than for the birds. Both sunflowers offer similar food value. Black-oil is a small sunflower that is easily opened by all birds due to its thinner hull (especially true for chicks, nuthatches and finches). This also makes the black-oil’s hull biodegrade and compost more easily than the thicker hulled striped sunflower. My greatest reasoning for buying black-oil over striped is the number of seeds you get in a bag. Striped sunflowers, with their thicker hull, are thus heavier than the softer-shelled black-oil. This results in the number of seeds by weight difference to be quite large between the two. Therefore, you will probably be getting more than twice the seed per weight with black-oil. This adds up to more seeds per bird per your unit of cost. Crack open a striped and a black-oil and you will see that the seed is about the same size, but it is the shell that makes the difference.

Niger Seeds

This is the most expensive seed we can buy for the birds, ranging from. Due to its high cost, it is usually only placed out for finches in specially designed niger feeders. These feeders have small, narrow holes where the seeds can only be extracted by fine billed birds.

Peanuts & Other Nuts

Nuts are the highest in nutrition, with lots of calories per weight, but are quite expensive. While I do know people that feed walnuts and pecans to birds and squirrels, most of us settle for the cheaper peanuts. You must crack open a couple of peanuts until the birds try them. Then they will be hooked and will come back regularly. I put my peanuts out at sunrise and the birds are always waiting. Within ½ hour they have cached and eaten all of them.
Shelled, crushed, peanuts are much more expensive than whole. I normally place these into bubble feeders (feeder with upside down feeding holes that prevents perching birds like House Finches from getting seeds) where chicks and nuthatches are normally only able to feed, mainly when we are in the most severe weather and when late winter has set in. Shelled peanuts can be provided in special peanut feeders.

Suet & Fat Balls

During the winter, birds need high caloric foods. Suet (beef or pork fat) is one of the best calorie providers. Suet cakes can be placed out year round. These are quite expensive, so buy them in bulk when they go on sale. There are many kinds on the market these days, but I have found that most birds prefer either the plain or peanut kind. Or you can make your own suet. If you go to any butcher where they cut their own meat, you can get free, or for a nominal price, beef or pork fat. The raw suet can be placed in onion bags, suet feeders, log feeders (or peanut butter) or hammered onto a piece of wood tied to the side of a tree. You can also melt down the suet and combine whatever ingredients you want (seed, honey, peanut butter, corn meal, wheat hearts, etc.) and make your own suet cakes. The one thing you have to be careful with providing pure fat, is that in warm weather (warm spells and when spring arrives) you have to remove the suet. Suet can spoil and the birds, which have no sense of smell, will eat it, get food poisoning and possibly die. I feed pure fat during the coldest months and then switch to the commercial stuff when spring gets close.
Whatever you feed your birds this winter, and however you feed them, Kennedy Wild Birds have a massive range of seeds, buts, live feed, feeders and baths in stock today - pop into our shop in Deeping St James or buy online at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com.

Monday 25 November 2013

5 easy steps to Winter bliss for your feathered visitors


So with Winter just around the corner and Christmas just 5 weeks away, we wanted to make sure you're fully prepared for the cold snap with these 5 easy steps to Winter bliss for your feathered visitors ....
  • 1.       Your bird feeders should be filled regularly with fresh, frost free feed. Sunflower heart chips are an excellent source of nutrients for a wide variety of UK wild birds.
  • 2.       Fat Balls and Suet Blocks should be hung in your garden and on your patio - again your garden birds will love these as they are full of nuts, seeds and the all important fat to keep them full and help them build up a healthy plumage.
  • 3.       Birds like nothing more than live feed - but that can be very difficult for them to find when the ground is covered in ice and snow so put out some mealworms and waxworms - live are best, but dried will be a suitable alternative.
  • 4.       Water baths and drinking stations should be filled daily with fresh cold water. Do not put hot or boiling water out, but on the other hand please try to keep the ice off the water.
  • 5.       And finally, Nesting Boxes should be cleared out and repaired or replaced in preparation for the spring.
We hope that helps you cover the basics this winter - wild birds can survive very cold snaps but a fresh bowl of water, a handful of dried mealworms and a feederfull of sunflower hearts will be a very welcome sight on a cold frosty morning.
And don't forget our Photograph Competition where you can win a £50 voucher to spend at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com so put your feeders and baths in a position where you can see them from your kitchen window and get snapping away when your feathered friends come to dine.

Wednesday 20 November 2013

5 easy steps to Winter bliss for your feathered visitors

So with Winter just around the corner and Christmas just 5 weeks away, we wanted to make sure you're fully prepared for the cold snap with these 5 easy steps to Winter bliss for your feathered visitors ....

  • 1.       Your bird feeders should be filled regularly with fresh, frost free feed. Sunflower heart chips are an excellent source of nutrients for a wide variety of UK wild birds.
  • 2.       Fat Balls and Suet Blocks should be hung in your garden and on your patio - again your garden birds will love these as they are full of nuts, seeds and the all important fat to keep them full and help them build up a healthy plumage.
  • 3.       Birds like nothing more than live feed - but that can be very difficult for them to find when the ground is covered in ice and snow so put out some mealworms and waxworms - live are best, but dried will be a suitable alternative.
  • 4.       Water baths and drinking stations should be filled daily with fresh cold water. Do not put hot or boiling water out, but on the other hand please try to keep the ice off the water.
  • 5.       And finally, Nesting Boxes should be cleared out and repaired or replaced in preparation for the spring.


We hope that helps you cover the basics this winter - wild birds can survive very cold snaps but a fresh bowl of water, a handful of dried mealworms and a feederfull of sunflower hearts will be a very welcome sight on a cold frosty morning.

And don't forget our Photograph Competition where you can win a £50 voucher to spend at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com so put your feeders and baths in a position where you can see them from your kitchen window and get snapping away when your feathered friends come to dine.

Tuesday 19 November 2013

Wild Birds Photo Competition in Full Swing

Have you entered the Kennedy Wild Bird Foods autumn photography competition yet?

We're offering one lucky winner a £50 online voucher to spend at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com.

The competition rules are very simple:
  • ·         You must have taken the photograph yourself
  • ·         You must own the copyright
  • ·         You must post it to our facebook or twitter feeds before 14th December 2013
  • ·         You must allow us to repost it & use it for promotional uses

So fill up your bird feeder with some fresh sunflower hearts & put some fresh water in your water bath and get snapping. Serious, funny, daft, artistic, creative - there are no boundaries and there will be some spot prizes for the funniest/strangest photo we receive.

Good luck & get snapping.

Monday 21 October 2013

Protect your feathered friends on Bonfire Night

We have all been told of ways of protecting our cats and dogs on Bonfire Night, but what about our feathered friends who have no option but to be outside while they are surrounded by strange lights and loud noises.

While we can keep our pets tucked up inside in the warm away from the fireworks going off, it is vitally important that we take into consideration the potential dangers and harm we may cause to wild birds during the next couple of weeks.

One of the most common issues that occurs around this issue is from people building their bonfires too close to trees and nest boxes.

The issue here isn’t of fireworks actually harming birds physically, but is more to do with loud bangs happening close to where they are nesting that result in them having to move elsewhere.

This can be particularly harmful at this time of year as birds need to preserve as much energy as possible over the long cold nights that are fast approaching.

Monday 14 October 2013

'Early birds' find worms for dinner - BBC Nature

We've just spotted this really interesting article about the feeding habits of wild birds on the BBC website and thought it would be good to share with you ...


Birds, such as great and blue tits, search for food in the morning but only return to eat it in late afternoon, scientists have found. The team believe the behaviour maximises their chances of avoiding predators during the day without starving to death overnight. Researchers from the University of Oxford tracked the birds' winter foraging movements using tiny tags.

All five of the studied species of songbirds behaved in the same way. The results are published in the Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

"Our results are important because they provide a new hypothesis for how animals forage," said Damien Farine, lead author from the University of Oxford.

"They suggest that animals integrate the different risks they face into one strategy that can be applied to satisfy both their need to avoid predation and avoid risk."

Scientists have been studying bird populations at Wytham Woods, Oxfordshire, UK since 1947. Finding food becomes more and more relevant towards the end of the winter when large sources of food, such as beech mast, have become depleted. The team knew from previous studies that, when the predation risk appears high, birds delay putting on fat until late in the day.

"In the 1970s, when there were almost no sparrowhawks, tits used to be much fatter [in winter], which helped them avoid the risk of starvation.

"When sparrowhawks returned [in greater numbers], the average body weight of great tits, for example, decreased," Mr Farine told BBC Nature.

According to Mr Farine these birds had shifted from a strategy of being fat, to a strategy where they delayed putting on fat until late in the day.

... please follow this link to read the full article ...

Kennedy Wild Bird Foods has a wide range of food, seeds & nuts for domestic and wild birds as well as  cat and dog food.

Tuesday 8 October 2013

Bird Watching for Beginners


A lot of birders have their first eye-opening experience with the avian world in their own back gardens - and usually from a young age. It could have been a robin nibbling on the berries on a frosty morning, a nuthatch visiting the feeder or a beautiful goldfinch singing on a warm Spring day. Whatever the species was, it opened the door to a wonderful world of wild birds. Most of us found soon after that while getting a handle on "garden" birds was pretty easy, the birds encountered further afield are another story.

Many are unfamiliar, only offer fleeting glimpses, or identification is elusive because they look just too much like several other species. When you are just starting out with birdwatching, identifying all of the birds you come across can seem to be overwhelming. However, before you decide to limit your birding to the confines of your garden, keep in mind that even seasoned experts run into birds that they can’t put a name to. Some birds will be a mystery but with practice, you should learn to identify most of the birds you see.

For better bird identification, try these suggestions:

Study the field guide: Don’t just flip through your trusty field guide, take time to study it on a regular basis. Try learning how to recognize different bird families first before focusing on the species. This provides the framework needed for easier identification and makes it easier to learn about the differences between similar groups like hawks and falcons or ducks and grebes. Once you have a good handle on the bird families in your region, then you can start studying the species in each of those families.

Field marks: This refers to the diagnostic characters that help identify birds at the species level. Instead of memorizing every tiny aspect of each species, just focus on learning the field marks to start. This saves time and greatly simplifies bird identification.

Practice in the field: Whether watching birds in the garden or looking at waterfowl at a local reserve, see if you can place the species you see in their respective families and look for the field marks pointed out in the book. If you know which family an unfamiliar bird belongs to, identifying it may just be a question of matching it to a species in the field guide. Practicing also means learning how to use your binoculars better and learning how to look for field marks like eyerings, wing bars, and other common features.

Take notes and make sketches: These practices might be the best way to learn how to identify birds because you are forced to truly study the birds you see. Start by writing down notes that detail what you see on the bird. For example, if you begin with the head of the bird, write about the shape of its bill, markings around the eye and on the face, the colors shown by the plumage, and so on for the back, wings, tail, and underparts. Next, try drawing a picture of the bird you see and attempt to copy its shape and the field marks that stand out. It might seem like a painstaking process but you will learn a lot about field identification!

What has been helpful to you in learning how to identify birds? Please share your stories in the comments of this blog or on our social media feeds - http://www.facebook.com/wildbirdfoods or http://www.twitter.com/wildbirdfoods

Monday 30 September 2013

Winter is almost here

Somehow winter is nearly upon us again and if we are to believe the forecasters’ predictions, we’re in for another cold one.
So stock the cupboards, dig out the thermals and get ready for the snow. But, let’s not forget our feathered friends.
There are a few things we can all do now to help our garden birds through the tough times ahead.
It has been said before but is always worth repeating; start putting food out now for the birds so that when the severe weather hits, they know where they can go when natural food sources are no longer accessible.
Be prepared to put food out twice a day in really bad weather and consider planting berry bushes to offer a natural winter food source.

Also, place feeders in sheltered locations wherever possible. The best place to put them is out of severe winds but not too close to hedges and other platforms that predators could use to ambush the birds while they are feeding.
The best feeders for winter time will have a large cover over the feeding area to provide a bit of extra shelter for the birds while they are eating.
Stock up now on suitable bird foods. If we are all snowed in again this year, buying bird food will be bottom of the to do list when we do make it out of the house so if you already have a store of birdseed and peanuts then the birds won’t go hungry even during the worst blizzards!
Luckily seeds and nuts keep for several months so even if you purchase them now, they’ll last a while. We sell 25kg bags of wild bird seed which can be stored in your garage or garden shed - as long as you keep them dry they'll be fine throughout the winter.
Good winter foods are high in fat so things like peanuts are ideal and remember that salted peanuts and dry roasted nuts are not suitable for birds – so save them for Christmas parties instead!
Seed mixes and fatballs are also good high energy choices to see your garden birds through the winter months.


Nesting season is over for another year, so if you have nesting boxes, late autumn is a good time to clean them out ready for next year.
You don’t want to be out in the snow more than you have to so basic maintenance is better done now while the temperatures are still relatively mild.
As you probably know, birds need water for bathing as well as drinking so it would be well worth while ordering a bird bath now if you don’t already have one, ready for the big freeze.

www.wildbirdfood.uk.com has a wide selection of wild bird food, nesting boxes, feeders and seed mixtures.

Wednesday 25 September 2013

Kennedy Wild Bird Foods - Your Local Pet Food Store

Kennedy Wild Bird Foods Ltd
At Kennedy Wild Bird Foods Ltd we understand that our customers need value for money and shop around for bargains - whether that is online or locally.

In fact, we don't just understand, we welcome & encourage it because we are confident that we can't be beaten on our knowledge, our prices or our friendly customer service.

We've thought of a few reasons why we don't think you'll find a better local supplier of wild bird food and pet food ....

  • We're a family run business with over 25 years experience in buying and selling wild bird and domestic pet food.
  • We have the widest selection of general pet foods in The Deepings & north of Peterborough.
  • We stock over 25 varieties of dog food and cat food including many well known brands like IAMS, HILLS, BAKERS, PURINA & SALTERS.
  • We also stock food for chickens and domestic/pet birds like parrots, canaries, budgies and parakeets.
  • We have a large selection of accessories for your pets and your garden to attract wild birds.
  • We specialise in the manufacture and sale of wild bird food.
  • We offer over 30 varieties of straight and blended seed mixes in bags ranging from 1kg up to 25kg - which offer fantastic value for money.
  • Our retail prices the LOWEST in The Deepings and the surrounding area.
  • We deliver anywhere in the UK - most areas are next day delivery.

We'd love to see you either physically in our store in Deeping St James, or virtually on our website ...

Kennedy Wild Bird Foods Ltd
The Warehouse
74 Station Rd
Deeping St James
Peterborough
PE6 8RQ

Mon to Fri : 08:00 till 17:00 & Sat : 09:00 till 15:00

Telephone: 01778 342665

Visit our website 24/7 at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com or email us at info@wildbirdfood.uk.com 

We look forward to seeing you very soon!
Kennedy Wild Bird Foods Ltd

Friday 20 September 2013

Feeding Wild Birds in Winter

With the long cold autumn & winter days approaching it is more important than ever to keep our feathered friends happy and healthy by supplying them with a nice selection of bird food. It’s easy to forget how tough it is for birds to feed when temperatures fall below zero and there is snow and ice covering the ground.
The simple fact is that even a small layer of snow covering their usual food sources is enough of a problem for birds to struggle to get access to it.
Then there is the obvious problem of the ground being too hard so birds like thrushes can’t get through to where they often feed from.
October is the ideal time to start putting food out in your garden because by the time the really cold weeks approach in a month’s time or so, birds will already know that they can come to your garden and receive a fresh, healthy supply of food
It is not an exaggeration to say that the food that we put in our gardens during the coldest weeks may well be the difference between life and death for thousands of birds!
For those that are reading this and never thought about feeding birds, then the tips and advice below will help you do this both effectively and without spending too much in the process.

What Shall I put in my Garden?

Of course there are many species of birds, so it is ideal to have a wide range of food to suit all types.
Fatballs, meal worms, peanuts and a nice mix of seeds are some of the more common and most favoured types of food supplies to have in your garden.
Water is also an important thing to remember, not just for birds to drink but also to help keep themselves clean. To avoid the water freezing over when the temperatures are really low it may be a good idea to float small objects in there, such as small twigs, as this will help avoid this problem.
Finally, a good feeding station or bird table is needed. It is always worth getting good quality feeding stations as this does not only provide a good place to feed from for the birds, but you can also choose a nice, attractive set to compliment your garden.
Hanging feeders are great as well as they can hold a wide variety of foods and are very easily visible and accessible for birds. Sunflower Hearts, peanuts and seeds can all be used in hanging feeders.

Extra Tips:
  • Try and put the food out early in the day. Birds will lose a lot of energy during the cold nights so will need to reenergise as quickly as possible. Also, putting food out late at night is more likely to attract unwanted visitors to your garden, such as rats and mice.
  • Give your feeding stations and bird tables a wash once a week and don’t leave any leftover foods lying around for too long. Think of the area like the birds equivalent of your kitchen, so for general hygiene and to avoid the spread of any potential diseases this is an important thing to remember.
  • Wash the bowl/bath you are using to supply the birds with water on a daily basis. It is important they are receiving fresh water and as they use the water to bathe in as well, it can become much less healthy if it is not cleaned and refilled on a regular basis.
  • Dried fruit is a nice treat for birds if you have some spare in the house to offer them, with the exception of desiccated coconut, this can be very harmful to birds!
For a large selection of low cost, high quality wild bird food, please visit our website at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com

Tuesday 17 September 2013

New Feathers For Autumn

The skies may seem a little quieter in the waning days of summer.  You might think the birds have already left with Autumn & then Winter just around the corner.  But they are still here if only for a little longer.  With breeding season behind them, now is the time that many birds molt or replace their feathers and are quietly waiting for the process to be completed before taking off on those long flights.  Not to mention it’s the perfect timing to grow more insulating feathers before the temperatures drop too much.
Even though birds spend a great deal of time caring for their feathers, eventually they wear out from things like physical abrasion and bleaching from the sun.  Similar to when humans lose teeth, new feathers begin to grow and push the old feathers out of the follicle.
Rather sensibly, most birds molt in patterns so as not to lose all their feathers at once allowing them to maintain body temperature and repel moisture.  Still, all birds are vulnerable while their flight feathers are replaced.  During this time, birds wisely find a good hiding place and keep quiet so as not to attract predators.
Ducks are one of a few species that molt all at once.  They too must find a safe place to quietly bide their time while new feathers grow in over a two to four week stretch rather than the typical five to twelve weeks for other types.
A fresh set of new feathers prior to migration gives birds the strength to make those long flights to warmer weather but it also saps their energy.  Another reason to continue to keep those feeders stocked going into the fall months.

We stock a wide range of bird seed, seed feeders, nesting boxes and food for domestic birds & animals - please visit us at www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/shop.html

Friday 6 September 2013

Are you ready for Autumn?

So summer may be slowly disappearing but let's not get too depressed about it - we've had the warmest & driest summer in the UK for many years.

So with Autumn on the horizon we thought we'd give you the low down on what you should be doing to prepare yourselves for the cooler, wetter, darker days ahead. Sorry, we don't mean to be too depressing so to cheer you up, please accept a small give of 10% off all your orders during September with discount code NEW10. Just pop your goodies in your basket and use the code at the checkout - your 10% will be automatically deducted before you enter your payment details.

Make sure your Seed Feeders are in good shape

Seed Feeders

After the summer we've just had, your feeders need cleaning or replacing - bacteria thrives in warm, dry conditions so please give all your feeders, baths etc a good scrub. If they are broken or cracked you should replace them - again, bacteria will get in the cracks and infect the food/water. We have a wide range of feeders on our website - http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/Seed_Feeders_.html.

Bird Seed

Bird Seed at Kennedy Wild Bird Foods
Now is the time to stock up on your bird seed. Buying in bulk will save yourself time & money. Make sure you buy the right seed or mixture - our feathered friends can be fussy eaters!

However, most wild birds found in UK gardens will love Sunflower Hearts. They are packed full with protein and oils, making them a most desirable food all year round. We sell 25kg bags for just £42.10 (just £37.89 with discount!) which is outstanding value. http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/Plain_Seeds_and_Peanuts.html

Live Feed

We all love to treat ourselves with a nice meal out & birds are no exception. The ground has been very hard this summer and will be again when the frost sets in so why not treat your avian diners to some live mealwoms & waxworms?


Live bird feed provides a tasty treat
Mealworms are our best selling live food and the number one choice for feeding wild birds. They are the larvae of the Flour Beetle, a native British insect which eats flour, meal, grain and other related crops. Their bodies are made up of over 48% crude protein and 40% fat making them an excellent, proven food for all insect eating garden birds.

Waxworms (Galleria Mellonella) are the larvae of the Greater Wax Moth. Their soft body is easily digestible and very nutritious being rich in protein, moisture and fat, making them an even more juicy meal than mealworms. Can be stored for 3 to 4 weeks at room temperature.

We always have a selection of live feed in store & we dispatch them in secure containers so the postman won't get a fright when he delivers them to you. Packed in various weights, the 2kg bag offers the best value for money at just £35.20 (just £31.68 with discount!). http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/Live_Bird_Food.html

Nesting Boxes

Nesting Boxes
And last but certainly not least, you should prepare your nesting boxes by cleaning out the old debris & repairing or replacing them if they are damaged. We stock a wide range of nesting boxes for birds of all sizes. Our best seller is the multi-bird nesting box - an exclusive design to the Nest Box Company, the only "interchangeable panel box" made in the UK that requires no tools at all to change over the panels.The box comes with three interchangeable front panels with aperture sizes of 25mm, 28mm and 32mm & is designed to attract up to 15 different kinds of birds - dependant upon which front is selected. http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/The_Nest_box_Company_Range.html

We hope you've had a great summer, and hope that we can help you prepare for the Autumn & Winter - if you can't find what you need on http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com please drop us a line at info@wildbirdfood.uk.com & we'll do our very best to help you.

Happy Birding!
 

Thursday 22 August 2013

How Do You Get Children Interested In Wildlife?

Forget Angry Birds & Make the Wild Birds In Your Garden Happy Ones!
On the surface, birding may seem fairly straightforward: you go out, you look for birds, you find the birds, you identify the birds and then call it a day. But it’s so much more than that, and the benefits run far deeper than simply being able to spot the difference between a Baltimore Oriole and a Bullock’s Oriole. There are many ways in which birding can be helpful, and that’s why it’s an excellent idea to not only instill in children a love of birding but to instill it as quickly as you can.

But how do you get a small child interested in birds when much they'd rather play with Angry Birds on their phone than go into the back garden & take note of the wildlife? One method is to play to their interests and insert birding into some of their normal activities. Children love to colour, so perhaps get them a bird coloring book to go along with the usual pages filled with superheroes or Barbies. When they want to play a board game, try playing a bird-themed one instead of Candy Land or Chutes and Ladders. Similarly, if it’s time to tuck them into bed with a bedtime story or sit them down for a movie, pick a narrative with birds as the main subject.

Less subtle ways of getting your kids interested in birds include hanging bird feeders and making it a point to encourage them to watch and try to identify all the birds they can, taking nature walks that will appeal to kids’ sense of exploration and discovery, and going to birding or nature festivals in your area.

There’s no denying that birding is a fun and fulfilling activity. The tranquility of nature, the thrill of the hunt (so to speak), the elation at finding and correctly identifying a bird – it’s easy to understand why kids can have just as great a time doing it as adults. But there are also several ways in which birding can impact a child’s life beyond just the momentary enjoyment of exploring and looking for birds.

Like all the best kinds of activities, kids can have a great time without realizing that they’re learning valuable skills. Waiting for birds to show up? There’s a reason they say that patience is a virtue. Comparing and contrasting two birds in order to differentiate between them? Your powers of deductive reasoning are at work. Trying to find where the birds actually are? Those are your observational skills being sharpened. The list goes on and on, and perhaps the best part is that a concurrent love of science and nature in general can’t help but be planted in your child’s mind. The earlier it’s planted, the stronger it’s likely to grow in later years – and more kids interested in science and the natural world around us is nothing but a good thing.

So while birding on its own merits is a fun and rewarding experience for kids, it’s also incredibly useful for helping your child to further develop necessary secondary skills as well as a healthy love of science and nature.

Premium Sunflower Hearts
How do you encourage your children to get involved with nature? Is bird spotting a dying pass-time? Would your kids rather get their wellies on & explore the back garden than play shoo 'em ups on their games console? We'd love to hear about your children's love of wild birds - please drop us a line today.

www.wildbirdfood.uk.com is a family run business that supplies top quality bird seed, sunflower hearts, bird feeders and other animal foods & accessories.

Thursday 15 August 2013

How Do Wild Birds Stay Cool in the Summer?

Floating Birdbath Raft from Kennedy Wild Bird Foods
The UK heatwave seems to have been around for months now & we absolutely love it. Blue skies, white fluffy clouds, bright orange sunshine - what could be better for the body & soul?

Luckily for us, we have the technological know-how to create areas that are temperature-controlled, and so can escape the Sun’s wrath by moving indoors to shade & air-contolled rooms.

Birds, unsurprisingly, lack the intellectual capacity to build such machines and thus have fewer artificial options to make the summer heat more tolerable. Note the use of the word “artificial” – because fortunately for birds, they can still utilize a few more natural ways of keeping cool.

Unfortunately, one of these ways is not sweating. Curiously enough, birds have no sweat glands, giving humans another advantage over them when it comes to beating the summer heat. Compounding that small evolutionary oddity are the facts that birds’ natural body temperature generally hovers around 40 degrees Celsius, their metabolic rates are generally fairly high and birds’ lifestyles are active ones. But despite the deck being stacked against them, birds can still get through heat waves without keeling over or dropping from the skies.

Much like dogs, birds will pant in an effort to lower their body temperature. Going hand-in-hand with that behavior is the respiration rate that birds have evolved to possess – in other words, they breathe rapidly enough that their body heat is dispersed much quicker than if they were to breathe at a normal speed. Additionally and as you might expect, the parts of birds that are covered with feathers (read: most of them) hold heat extremely well. Accordingly, there are still a few bare patches of skin on various birds – usually on the legs, feet and face – that allow some amount of heat to escape.

If those strategies don’t work to their satisfaction, birds are smart enough to have figured out other behaviors over the millennia that can combat the blazing heat. Much like those of us who choose to either stay out of the direct sunlight or inside altogether on a hot day, birds will not only try to stick to shaded areas as much as possible but will also cut down on their activity level during those parts of the day when the Sun is highest and most intense. When a bird is lucky enough to be caught in a cool breeze, it may puff out its feathers or flutter its wings in an effort to let the fresh air hit its exposed skin. Finally, some lighter-colored birds have even become little avian scientists and will turn those parts of themselves that are lightest toward the Sun. The reason? Lighter colors reflect more heat, and so these birds won’t absorb as much heat from the Sun’s rays.

But sometimes, birds just can’t do it all on their own. Luckily, we offer plenty of products that further help birds stay cool beyond what they’re able to accomplish by themselves. From bird baths to water coolers and even decorative fountains, there are many options for birders to consider when they decide they want to help their wild garden birds out. Baths come in all shapes and sizes, but we recommend the floating BirdBath Raft which sits on the surface of your garden pond and provides a constant source of refreshing water.

So even though birds may not be able to enjoy sitting in the blazing sunshine, they’ve found many ways to beat the heat nonetheless – and they don’t even have to pay for any of them.

How do you look after your wild birds during the summer months? Do you have any tips or helpful advice that you'd like to share with us & our readers?

Friday 9 August 2013

Can Wild Birds Predict the Weather?

Wild Bird Weather Vane
Meteorology is a tricky business. We've all been frustrated by the TV weather man for another dodgy forecast. But long before the MET Office or weather forecasters standing in front of a green screen or broadcasting over the radio, people relied on far less technological means to predict the impending weather. Quite often, this involved observing the behavior of animals and correlating that to the weather that would follow. Cows lying down? Must be a thunderstorm coming. Cats cleaning behind their ears? Might be rain on the way.

More relevant to our purposes, included in many of those observations were birds. For example, an old wives’ tale states that if birds feed during a storm, the rain will continue for a long time – but if they don’t, then the rain will end fairly quickly. But are our feathered weathermen any more reliable than a multi-million pound satellite? But perhaps more specifically, are they reliable at all?

Yes they are - and theses techniques have been around for a lot longer than than the space-age technology we use today.

Most birds have what’s called the Vitali organ, a special middle-ear receptor that can sense extremely small changes in atmospheric pressure. With extreme sensitivity comes equally acute pain reception, so the faster the atmospheric pressure falls (indicating an approaching storm), the more birds that fly low (and the lower they fly) to the ground in an attempt to alleviate the discomfort caused by the pressure change in their ears at higher altitudes. They don’t have to be flying to escape the pain either – if you notice a sudden and sharp increase in activity at your bird feeders or a massing on power lines, there’s probably a good chance that a storm is bearing down on your location. Conversely, if you notice that birds are flying high up in the sky, the weather is most likely clear.

The height at which birds are flying isn’t the only way you can use their actions to try and predict the weather. With a storm approaching, seagulls usually take a break from flying and seek refuge somewhere along the coast to wait the bad weather out. And all kinds of birds usually become very quiet right before it begins to rain.

So while birds may not be able to alert you to tomorrow’s temperature or if there’s going to be a frost overnight, they can still be useful and practical meteorological aids. But as for that old wives’ tale that you can determine the relative length of a period of rain by whether or not birds feed in a storm, there seems to be no hard evidence that either confirms or denies its premise.

Are you a farmer that relies on wild birds to help with your harvesting or crop sewing? Do your garden feeders get busy or quiet during different weather conditions? We'd love to hear from you if you've got a story or scientific evidence that you'd like to share with us.

www.wildbirdfood.uk.com sells high quality, low cost wild bird seed and feeders direct to the UK public from our website and our store in Deeping St James, Peterborough.

Monday 22 July 2013

What's on the menu tonight?

When you go to a restaurant or open the kitchen cupboards you like to be presented with a choice of tasty, nutritious dishes to tempt your taste buds.

Well so do the wild birds that visit your garden. The size, age, species all have a baring on what your feathered friends like to eat.

In a recent article on the BBC website, Tim Harrison from the British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) said, "Basically, the thing you need to think about when providing different food for birds in your garden is that the reason why there are all these different species is because they all have slightly different requirements and they all have slightly different niches," explains Mr Harrison. "They all feed in slightly different ways and by doing that it means they're not in direct competition with each other."

Be careful when leaving kitchen scraps out - too much salt, sugar and other additives can be lethal to wild life. The graphic above gives an indication of the types of food different birds like to eat - from live mealworms for House Sparrows to Sunflower Hearts for Bullfinches - they all know what they like so you should take the time to study what types are visiting your garden and then lay on a spread that will keep them coming back.

Kennedy Wild Bird Foods sell a large range of bird seed and live food for all UK wild birds and we also have experts on hand to guide and assist you if you're not sure what you need - we're here to help.

Have a browse around our website (http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/acatalog/Bird_Section.html) and securely order online for next day UK delivery.

BTW - don't forget to leave plenty of fresh water in the shade during the hot summer months - your wild birds will need it for drinking & bathing in to keep themselves cool.

Monday 15 July 2013

Bin It, Don't Kill It!


Bin It, Don't Kill It

Thousands of wild animals are needlessly killed every year by eating or being caught in our rubbish.

The RSPCA reports over 7,000 calls alone regarding litter-related injuries and deaths - and that is just the tip of the iceberg with many more going unnoticed or being reported directly to local vets.

Drinks cans, plastic bags, broken glass, tin cans etc can all be lethal death traps for unsuspecting, hungry wild animals hunting for scraps of food or drink. But it's not just household rubbish that creates often slow & painful deaths for our wildlife, chewing gum can be just as harmful.
Litter Kills Wildlife

From the sky, a piece of gum discarded on the pavement looks just like a tasty chunk of bread to our feathered friends but when the swallow it, the gum blocks their digestive system and prevents them from ingesting other nutrients or water and they will eventually die of dehydration and malnutrition.

This is entirely preventable by everyone - just take your rubbish home or dispose of it responsibly - it really is that simple.

At Kennedy Wild Bird Food we think there's no better site than seeing a wild bird using a bird feeder in a private garden or public park - why should they suffer and die because of our laziness?


Tuesday 9 July 2013

Table for two?

The species of birds that rely and visit your garden for food will totally depend on the varieties and mixtures of feeds that you have available for them to eat. 

You should always remember that your garden, your bird feeders, and the variety and quality of feeds available represent a restaurant to birds. 

Like all good restaurateurs, to ensure that your tables remain full, one must maintain a selection of the finest and most nutritious feeds available.

You might have many bird restaurants around your residence, many of which may be 'cheep' takeaways, selling high priced corn-based feeds. 

All of our mixtures are blended to ensure the highest nutritional benefits by using only the finest seeds available from around the world.

All mixtures continue to undergo a most stringent testing programme to ensure that they are totally palatable. With over twenty years continuous research we are today extremely proud of our range of mixtures. These will ensure your tables and feeders are inundated with the many wonderful species which due to modern farming methods have become so reliant upon us all for their survival.

Please visit our website to see what's on today's menu - http://www.wildbirdfood.uk.com/TheResaurantChoice.htm