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- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!saimiri.primate.wisc.edu!zazen!uwec.edu!major
- From: major@cnsvax.uwec.edu
- Newsgroups: rec.gardens
- Subject: Re: Sunflower seed and siskins!
- Message-ID: <1993Jan21.070158.3207@cnsvax.uwec.edu>
- Date: 21 Jan 93 07:01:58 -0600
- References: <8853.5072@stratus.SWDC.Stratus.COM>
- Organization: University of Wisconsin Eau Claire
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <8853.5072@stratus.SWDC.Stratus.COM>, jane@soave.swdc.stratus.com (Jane Beckman) writes:
- > I've been having to make sprouted-sunflower compost out of the
- > regular birdseed in my feeders, since the birds toss out the
- > milo and striped sunflower seeds, going for the millet and
- > black-oil sunflower. Since the downspout drains nearby, the
- > feeder waste was getting to be a problem. So, to solve this
- > (as well as the shells all over), I ordered some sunflower
- > heart chips from Duncraft.
- >
- Ah, the downfall of feeding mixed seed. Yes, most
- birds (like most of us?) will pick through the bad
- stuff to get to the good stuff. Milo is basically
- worthless filler; birds will eat it after everything
- else is gone. Black-oil sunflower seeds are preferred
- by more species than any other seed that I know.
- I suggest multiple feeders each with its own kind of
- seed. Sunflower heart chips are expensive, but such
- a flock of first time siskins is probably well worth
- the extra expense.
-
- > Wonderful stuff---no more sunflowers coming up all over the
- > garden. And I found out an added bonus---it attracts pine
- > siskins!
- >
- > We had been getting the usual bunch of house and Cassin's
- > finches, a few crossbills, a whole flock of mourning doves,
- > but the gourmet chow lured in a whole flock of very hungry
- > pine siskins. Siskins are similar to lesser goldfinch,
- > brown-streaked with gold on wings and tail.
- . . .
- > Sometimes I wonder if I'm indirectly fertilizing the
- > garden---guess what birds do, right after they eat!
-
- This "fertilizer" should be raked up and removed; it
- can be very harmful to your feathered friends if it
- is allowed to accumulate.
- > --
- > Jilara [jane@swdc.stratus.com]
- >
- --John [major@uwec.edu]
-