![]() And the heat causes the suet to melt, or worse, go rancid, causing a mess to clean up that’s no longer good for the birds to eat. By this time of year, plenty of natural food sources are available to the local bird population. We take our suet feeder down in the summer. It’s a good thing you can make several batches and freeze them. Once you get regular visitors, keep your suet feeder filled otherwise, you’ll have to start the process all over again. It can take a while for word to spread among the feathered folk in your area where the good food is. You’ll likely find nuthatches, chickadees, flickers, woodpeckers, blue jays, wrens, goldfinches, titmice, cardinals and brown thrashers.īe patient if you’re just setting up your feeder and don’t see many birds visiting. Quite a few birds appreciate a suet feeder. ![]() ![]() (They’ll melt in the warmer months.) Don’t forget to make a hole for a string before you put them in the freezer. You can even smash some of the mix into cookie cutters and freeze them to make hanging suet treats in the winter. I sliced mine into squarish rectangles, but you can easily roll these into balls or other shapes to fit whatever type of suet feeder you have. Keep them as simple as you want, or go all out and make up a deluxe suet treat. But you can add extra ingredients to make the cakes more appealing. You might already have them in your pantry. These suet cakes use a base recipe that only requires four easy-to-find ingredients. (I mixed this batch up on the back porch in the snow!) Plenty of commercially made suet cakes are available, but making your own means you can control the quality of the ingredients and choose your own extra additions to attract specific types of birds. For a quick and fun project, you can easily make your own suet cakes at home. (Check out Cherly’s excellent tutorial on how to render tallow.) Access to high-energy foods is especially important in the cold months when other natural food resources are scarce. Suet feeders allow birds access to quality high-fat foods, such as lard, tallow (birds easily digest animal fats) or nut butters. Most of the seeds in commercially available birdseed blends are high in fat sunflower, safflower and nyjer. Think of how quickly they move and the energy required for all that flitting about, compared to their overall size, and it’s no wonder they consistently need high-energy food sources to keep them going. With their high metabolic rates, these tiny creatures need high-fat food content. If you wish to have more information about a particular NUGGETS™ item, select from the list to the below and you will be directed to that product’s information.Setting up suet feeders is a great way to attract birds to your backyard. They will provide you and your family hours of enjoyment from watching nature in action. ![]() Independent testing shows wild birds love them and they are easy to use and refill – and come in a handy resealable bag. This mix may then be fed from tube or hopper style feeders.Ĭ&S NUGGETS™ wild bird feeding products represent quite a departure for the industry. NUGGETS™ can also be blended with 5-10 lbs. Once the birds discover the Nuggets, move them inside the feeder. To adapt bluebirds to this food source, start by putting a small amount of Bluebird Nuggets on the feeder ledge. If you are a serious birder, or even a beginner, this ready to feed wild bird food has a high energy suet base, which means both no waste and no mess!Ĭ&SNUGGETS™ can be fed alone on a platform feeder or Nugget/Peanut/Sunflower feeder using 1/3″ wire mesh. Our NUGGETS™ line is packaged in resealable bags and are available in four new flavors to attract more songbirds. C&Shas revolutionized the wild bird feeding industry once again with our new NUGGETS™ bird feeding formulations designed for suet, fruit and insect eating wild birds. ![]()
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