Markgc wrote: » Okay so many people are having a good time with the snow and a couple days off work. Good on you. Enjoy it. The wildlife though has a difficult time in these conditions with snow measuring half a meter in depth in places, creating great difficulty for it to find food. Give a hand and help it survive. This is a tough time for birds. Keen gardeners will know that their natural food source has been depleted, leaving our feathered friends struggling to find food under the heavy cover of snow. They need all the help they can get. They will eat seeds bread and apples. DO NOT FEED THEM PORRIDGE OATS. When wet this can glue their beaks shut, starving them to death. Foxes like cooked or raw meat and tinned pet food. Foxes also like other savoury items such as cheese, table scraps, bread soaked in fat, fruit and cooked vegetables. Also call-in to elderly neighbours. Thanks for taking the time. Stay safe.
Markgc wrote: » DO NOT FEED THEM PORRIDGE OATS. When wet this can glue their beaks shut, starving them to death.
fryup wrote: » really first i heard of that
Markgc wrote: » Yes of course water is essential too. Without water nothing survives. With regards to porridge oats, if you throw out dry oats birds may eat them but the chances of the oats remaining dry is usually slim in our variable weather. Cheap alternatives are readily available.
Markgc wrote: » Okay so many people are having a good time with the snow and a couple days off work. Good on you. Enjoy it. The wildlife though has a difficult time in these conditions with snow measuring half a meter in depth in places, creating great difficulty for it to find food. Give a hand and help it survive. This is a tough time for birds. Keen gardeners will know that their natural food source has been depleted, leaving our feathered friends struggling to find food under the heavy cover of snow. They need all the help they can get. They will eat seeds bread and apples. DO NOT FEED THEM PORRIDGE OATS. When wet this can glue their beaks shut, starving them to death.Foxes like cooked or raw meat and tinned pet food. Foxes also like other savoury items such as cheese, table scraps, bread soaked in fat, fruit and cooked vegetables. Also call-in to elderly neighbours. Thanks for taking the time. Stay safe.
Pa ElGrande wrote: » I've been feeding the local wildlife here.https://streamable.com/a7jf9
Markgc wrote: » You need to set some poison down for that sort pal.🀣
Markgc wrote: » UNSAFE SEEDS: The seeds of apples and the pits of cherries, peaches, plums, pears, apricots and nectarines are all unsafe to give to your birds. They contain varying levels of a cyanide compound that can cause death. ... Unfortunately, birds chew everything, and if given the opportunity to chew open a pit, they will. So with a little time, it is best to core and remove seeds.
Doltanian wrote: » Why would you feed foxes? They are vermin and should be eradicated at every opportunity.
david75 wrote: » I hung up some apples in our tree in the garden and put out some sesame seeds and bits of cheese on two plates. No sign of them going near them so far. We’ve two robins living in the huge bush that covers our back wall and loads of small sparrows and finches I think nearby and a thrush. Are they just not seeing it maybe?
lolo62 wrote: » I hung two fat balls in a bit of onion mesh bag from the tree out the back and they didn't go near them... They went for the plate when I broke them up. Are the plates up nice and high?
david75 wrote: » No they’re on the raised deck at the back wall and another down by the back door. Our two robins are usually totally fearless and often land on my palm or take food out of my fingers. Unusual they’re so reluctant
Elmer Blooker wrote: » Those balls of fat yokes should be banned. They must be absolutely laced with chemicals. They could last for months/years and still not go mouldy. I wouldn't leave them out for the birds if it was -20c!