Turn Your Yard Into a Winter Refueling Spot for Birds
This story was orginally published as “Fill ’er Up” in the January-February 2013 issue of Audubon magazine.
This story was orginally published as “Fill ’er Up” in the January-February 2013 issue of Audubon magazine.
Hello dude, really like this concept. I did not know much more about turning a yard into a winter refueling spot for birds but the allocation you did here makes me knowable about this issue. Thanks for this pretty nice allocation.
https://www.drsnooze.com/
Russ and other commenters,
The Plains region does include the Upper Midwest, and the Southeast does include Maryland. My apologies that the region descriptions didn't make that clear. (This is an abridged version of a longer article in AUDUBON Magazine.) For the Upper Midwest, I'd suggest bunchberry dogwood (Cornus canadensis) for a low, creeping ground-cover type shrub that's beautiful and also an excellent berry-producer for birds. Here is a description plus photos from the Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Centers native plant database, an excellent resource: http://www.wildflower.org/plants/result.php?id_plant=COCA13 Southern arrowwood (Viburnum dentatum), despite the confusing common name, is also native to the Upper Midwest, and an excellent tall shrub for winter berries. In Maryland, depending on your location (mountains? coastal plain?) you could grow American Beautyberry and Northern Bayberry from the table above, both excellent choices for landscaping and for birds. Happy planting!
Right Ross, I too, am a midwesterner, and have chickadees all year, but also LOVE the waxwings when they show up, usually twice a year. I think the bayberry and arrowroot would be fine her in the midwest, is there any other good ones for our cold winters up north here?
It's a very good idea, but it's all about the budget. A particular organization can take this kind of responsibility. As an individual we must support this...
Leo Von Wendorff
Maryland was left off too.
The above article on the berry bushes was helpful, but it totally omited the upper midwest area. Such as the states of Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan (upper & lower), Iowa and the Dakotas. We have a unique growing and weather system here and are looking for help on what will survive and produce for the birds.


Switch Modern
It would be amazing to turn a backyard into a bird sanctuary. There is a modern birdhouse at Switch Modern that I love that would look great. Here's the link: http://www.switchmodern.com//Outdoor-Accessories/IMAKE-Studio-Birdhouse-...
http://www.switchmodern.com/