Category: Green Home & Garden

  • 7 Easy Ways to Protect Bird Populations

    white throated sparrow

    “Pan, who and what art thou?” he cried huskily.

    “I’m youth, I’m joy,” Peter answered at a venture,
    “I’m a little bird that has broken out of the egg.”

    ―J.M. Barrie, Peter Pan

    We love our birds here, and even those who were reluctant at first were won over by their cheerful, bullying ways. We’ve been careful to make sure we set out seed and suet during the many, many, many days of ridiculous weather and unusual cold this winter has thrown at us (and when I say we, I mostly mean Jeff, who is better at remembering things than I am these days).

    While setting out seed is helpful for our feathered friends, who are warm blooded and need the nutrients to keep warm during a time of year where their usual sources of food are not readily available, there are lots of other ways to offer a helping hand all year round.

     

    house wren in snow

    7 Easy Ways to Protect Bird Populations

     

    Keep Birds Safe from Cats

    A 2013 study estimated cats kill 1.3 to 4.0 billion birds every year, making them likely to be the biggest threat to bird mortality. Most of those are probably due to stray and feral felines, not well-fed housecats, but I know at least one of my cats has found the occasional bird an irresistible temptation.

    • Keep your cats indoors as much as possible. If you have a cat that just is miserable unless it can free-range a bit, a bell on a sparkly collar can help alert birds to his presence.
    • Situate feeders and birdhouses in places a cat can’t get to. Height isn’t quite enough; baby birds will be on the ground beneath while fledging so keep that in mind.
    • Make sure birdhouse tops are secure. Cats can climb better than you think and the last thing you want to see is it scooping its paw into the top of your birdhouse, helping herself to the baby bird feast inside. (Don’t ask how I know.)
    • Take strays to a no-kill shelter rather than just giving food. Donate to no-kill shelters so they can continue to house cats waiting adoption and offer low-cost neutering. And it goes without saying, spay and neuter your own cats.

     

    Birdproof your windows

    Window collisions are probably the second most dangerous threat to birds, killing 365-988 million in the US each year. Low-rise buildings (56%) and residences (44%) are much more of a problem than skyscrapers (only 1%). This one is a pretty easy fix:

    • Don’t put feeders directly outside a window.
    • If you have sliding glass doors or windows that you know are collision threats, invest in some specially-made window decals. They are fairly unobtrusive to our view, but when placed on the outside noticeable reflect UV light.
    • Or, a DIY tape pattern will work too, according to the American Bird Association. “Most birds will avoid windows with vertical stripes spaced four inches apart, or horizontal stripes spaced two inches apart.”

     

    Provide shelter

    Trees are bare in winter, so they’re not doing much to keep birds warm through long nights with bonechilling winds. So while shelter is definitely a year-round concern for birds, it’s especially nice to aid them during the cold months.

    • Leave a brush pile of fallen branches. An easy way to start a brush pile is to just hang onto your Christmas tree; bonus points if you hang some suet and birdseed “ornaments” on.
    • Hang birdhouses in areas that are shielded from high winds.
    • Clean out birdhouses at the end of nesting season. This will help new bird tenants stay healthy, and make it easier for them to move in.
    • Grow shrubs and other nest-friendly foliage.

     

    Don’t use pesticides

    Pesticides poison insects. Birds eat insects. Whether they’re affected directly (by being poisoned by the chemical itself) or indirectly (by ingesting poisoned insects, or by a depleted insect food supply), common sense suggests pesticides are not bird-friendly.

    • This one seems like a no-brainer to me. Skip the pesticides. Encourage more birds (and bats) in your area for natural pest control.

     

    Go native

    Cultivating plants native to your area means less maintenance for you, as they are already acclimated to your weather, soil, etc. It also means encouraging insects your neighborhood birds and wildlife have evolved to eat. By contrast, exotic plantings need lots of care and cultivate the foreign insects that traveled with them. This is how we get explosive, damaging insect populations like the stinkbug: they have no local natural predators.

     

    Yes, food and water

    As the world around us becomes increasingly more urban, birds have to fly farther to find the food and water they need to stay alive. It’s easy to create a habitat that can become a bird’s oasis. Just keep in mind that if you start, they will come to depend on you as a reliable source; don’t let them down.

    • Water can be hard to come by during times of freezing cold and times of draught. Do your best to keep bird baths clean and unfrozen. I highly suggest something like this Water Wiggler in bird baths; they keep the water moving and the mosquito population down.
    • Offer food in a variety of ways. Some birds like hanging feeders; some like to feed from the ground. Some forage for insects in dead wood and in leaf piles. Some love flowers and their seeds.
    • You get what you pay for in feeder seed. Cheaper bags of seed have lots of filler that will be wasted as birds root through it looking for the good stuff. We mostly stick with suet and black sunflower seed, which seems to be a crowd pleaser, and additional specialty feeders for the hummingbirds in the spring and summer.

     

    Educate.

    You care for what you know. It’s easy to let the sounds and creatures of nature fade into the background of our noisy, busy lives.

    • Take the time to point out different species of birds, their calls and identifiers, to those who don’t know them— especially kids. There’s lots of birds. It takes a discerning eye to realize there are fewer jays than we had as kids, an ear that is accustomed to the every day chatter of neighborhood birds to notice when something extraordinary has come to call.
    • Share these tips with neighbors and encourage them to create welcoming spaces for birds in their own backyards, so we can weave a tapestry of safe havens within our cities.

     

    titmouse and junco

     

    It’s a little bit of hassle that is totally worth it, to know you’re able to share in bird survival and bring them closer to your own world.

    What would life be like without birds? Not waking to crows cawing? Without seeing a flash of color dart from treetops? I don’t want to find out. Do you?

    What did I miss? Any other ways you support your local birds?

     

    *Disclosure: Product links are Amazon affiliate links, which means if you click through and make a purchase I will receive a small affiliate fee.*

     

  • Bee the Change: 10 Ways to Protect Bees and Other Pollinators

    Bee the Change: 10 Ways to Protect Bees and Other Pollinators

     

    bee

    The keeping of bees is like the direction of sunbeams.
    ― Henry David Thoreau

    Last Sunday in Oregon some 25,000 bees were found dead in a Target parking lot, an unsettling headline to read on the first day of National Pollinator Week. The jury is still out on the cause, but it looks like an improperly applied pesticide (not intended for trees while in bloom) might be to blame.

    It’s being called one of the largest documented bumble bee deaths in the US, but bee die-offs have been happening with disturbing frequency over the last few years: annually we lose 30% of our bees. These die-offs are referred to as “colony collapse disorder,” and like this latest bee death episode the reasons are unclear. I’ve heard climate change is to blame, or over citification/under naturalization (I made those terms up but you know what I mean), or cell phone interference, or (most likely) the overuse of pesticides.

    Bees and other pollinators are important, and it’s important that we sit up and take notice and care— and do what we can to help. To lose any prominent member in the food chain is inviting ecosystem chaos, but losing pollinators means severely impacting food security.

     

    share the buzz

     

    This Whole Foods photo represents what our homegrown food supply looks like without the aid of bees, who pollinate more than 100 of our crops.

    So what can we do to help bees and pollinators?

    1. Don’t use pesticides. They impact bees and other pollinators, and I’m not convinced long-term exposure is great for every other kind of animal, either. Also, keep in mind that some insects may be considered pests in their larval stage but go on to become pollinators, or are important food sources for more loved birds and other wildlife.
    2. Buy organic. The more traction the organic movement achieves, the more it can expand and the more accessible it can become. Supply and demand, friends.
    3. Grow your own. Plant bee friendly flowers and encourage your neighbors to do the same. Think of it as a natural patchwork quilt or a bee railroad, offering sustenance through “food deserts” created by large expanses of asphalt and concrete.
    4. Go native. Stick with wildflowers that occur naturally in your region. They’re easier to grow, more hardy and have evolved to be more resistant to local pests (thus reducing the need for pest control). They’re also evolved to provide the best for your local bees.
    5. Buy local. Seek out local honey and support your local beekeepers.
    6. Educate yourself. This Citizen Scientist Pollinator Monitoring Guide is a pretty comprehensive source of bee info.
    7. Be citizen scientists. In the US, participate and add data to The Great Sunflower Project. In the UK they’ve streamlined the process with a smartphone app that makes it easy to contribute photos and data.
    8. Educate others. The fallout of bee decline affects us all, starting with higher produce prices and ending with something much worse. Spread the word. I like the Whole Foods Share the Buzz page as a place to start.
    9. Donate. The Xerces Society works with researchers and citizen monitors to collect bee data to help shed light on the problem, with legislators to preserve pollinator-friendly habitat, and with farmers and landowners to rebuild bee supporting landscapes.
    10. Sign your name. A class of pesticides called “neonics” has been listed as a possible cause of colony collapse disorder. European officials have enacted a 2 year ban on the use of these pesticides and this petition asks the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) to do the same. Give it and others like it a sign. It only takes a second.

     

  • Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    Wordless Wednesday: Crocuses

    crocuses

     

    It takes courage to be crocus minded.

    God, I would rather wait till June, like wise roses,
    when the hazards of winter are safely behind, and I am expected
    and everything is ready for roses.

    But crocuses? Highly irregular.
    Knifing through hard-frozen ground and snow, sticking their necks out,
    because they believe in Spring
    and have something personal and emphatic to say about it.

    ―Jo Sorley

     

    Not sure how I’ve never seen this quote before, but I love it very much.

    May we all be brave like crocuses.