Cavity Nesting Wild Birds
Eastern
Bluebird
Mountain
Bluebird
Western
Bluebird
Purple
Martin
Wood Duck
Screech Owl
Northern
Saw-whet Owl
Barn Owl
Barred Owl
Tree
Swallow
Barn
Swallow
Violet-green
Swallow
Black-capped
Chickadee
Carolina
Chickadee
Carolina
Wren
House Wren
Northern
Flicker
Red-bellied
Woodpecker
American
Robin
American
Kestrel
Great
Crested Flycatcher
Ash-throated
Flycatcher
Red-breasted
Nuthatch
White-breasted
Nuthatch
Bufflehead
Duck
Goldeneye
Duck
Hooded
Merganser
Tufted
Titmouse
Eastern
Phoebe
Gray
Catbird
Prothonotary
Warbler
House Finch
Hummingbirds
Ruby-throated
Hummingbird
Rufous
Hummingbird
Anna's
Hummingbird
HummZinger Hummingbird Feeders
|
More
than two dozen North American birds will nest in bird
houses. The following descriptions will help you
determine which birds might visit your neighborhood.
Bluebirds
If
you put up a bluebird house near an old field, orchard,
park, cemetery, or golf course, you'll have a good chance
of attracting a pair of bluebirds. They prefer nest boxes
on a tree stump or wooden fence post between three and
five feet high. Bluebirds also nest in abandoned
woodpecker nest holes. The most important measurement is
the hole diameter. An inch and a half is small enough to
deter starlings. Starlings and house sparrows have been
known to kill baby bluebirds as well as adults sitting on
the nest.
Bluebirds have problems with other animals too. The
easiest way to discourage predatory cats, snakes,
raccoons, and chipmunks is to mount the house on a metal
pole, or use a metal predator guard on a wood post.
Purple
Martins
Many people want martins because,
it's been said, these birds "can eat 2,000
mosquitoes a day." While it's true that they eat
flying insects, don't expect purple martins to wipe out
your mosquitoes. Martins actually prefer dragonflies,
insects which prey on mosquito larvae.
Mosquitoes are most active after sunset. If you want to
rid your yard of mosquitoes, put up a bat roosting box.
One bat can eat thousands of mosquitoes a night.
But don't cross martins off your prospective tenant list
because they don't live up to their "bug
zapping" reputation. If you need a reason for
attracting them, these gregarious swallows put on a show
that's better than any television soap opera.
You have the best chance of attracting martins if you put
a house on the edge of a pond or river, surrounded by a
field or lawn. Martins need a radius of about 40 feet of
unobstructed flying space around their houses. A
convenient wire nearby gives them a place to perch in
sociable groups.
Martins nest in groups, so you'll need a house with a
minimum of four large rooms -- 6 or more inches on all
sides, with a 2-1/4 inch entrance hole about an inch and
a half above the floor.
Ventilation and drainage are critical factors in martin
house design. Porches, railings, porch dividers and
supplemental roof perches, like a TV antenna, will make
any house more appealing.
Gourds may also be made into houses by making an entrance
hole and providing drainage. If you use gourds, it's not
necessary to add railings and perches. Adult martins will
perch on the wire used to hang the houses.
Before you decide on a house, take the time to think
about what kind of pole you're going to put it on.
Martins will occupy a house that's between ten and twenty
feet off the ground. Some poles are less cumbersome than
others.
Gourd houses are the easiest to set up. You can string
them:
* from a wire between two poles
* from a sectional aluminum pole
* on pulleys mounted to cross-bar high up on a pole.
Light-weight aluminum houses can be mounted on
telescoping poles, providing easy access for maintenance
and inspection. Because of their weight (well over 30
pounds), wood houses cannot be mounted on easy-access
telescoping poles. You'll have to use a sturdy metal or
wood pole attached to a pivot post. The problem with this
"lowering" technique is that you can't tilt the
house without damaging the nests inside. If you put your
house on a shorter, fixed pole, ten to twelve feet high,
you can use a ladder to inspect and maintain it.
Robins
Robins are our largest thrushes. They prefer
to build their nest in the crotch of a tree. If you don't
have an appropriate tree, you can offer a nesting
platform. Pick a spot six feet or higher up on a shaded
tree trunk or under the overhang of a shed or porch.
Creating a "mud puddle" nearby offers further
excitement, as robins use mud to line their nests.
Chickadees,
Nuthatches, and Titmice
Chickadees, titmice, and nuthatches
share the same food, feeders, and habitats. If you put a
properly designed nest box in a wooded yard, at least one
pair is sure to check it out.
Put chickadee houses at eye level. Hang them from limbs
or secure them to tree trunks. The entrance hole should
be 1-1/8" to attract chickadees yet exclude house
sparrows.
Anchor houses for hatches on tree trunks five to six feet
off the ground.
You can encourage these birds to stay in your yard by
continuing to fill your suet and peanut feeders through
the summer.
Brown
Creepers and Prothonotary Warblers
Look
for brown creepers to nest behind the curved bark of tree
trunks. In heavily wooded yards, slab bark houses will
appeal to creepers. Prothonotary warblers also prefer
slab bark houses, but theirs must be placed over water.
Wrens
Wrens don't seem to be very picky about
where they nest. Try nest boxes with a 1" x 2"
horizontal slot (1-1/2" x 2-1/2" for the larger
Carolina wrens) instead of a circle. These are easier for
the wrens to use.
Wrens are notorious for filling up any conceivable nest
cavity with twigs, regardless of whether they use the
nest. Since male house wrens build several nests for the
female to choose from, hang several nest boxes at eye
level on partly sunlit tree limbs. Wrens are sociable and
will accept nest boxes quite close to your house.
Tree
and Violet-green Swallows
Tree swallows prefer nest boxes attached to
dead trees. Space the boxes about seven feet apart for
these white-bellied birds with iridescent blue-green
backs and wings. The ideal setting for these
insect-eaters is on the edge of a field near a lake,
pond, or river.
Violet-green swallows nest in forested mountains of the
west; boxes placed on large trees in a semi-open woodland
will attract them.
Barn
Swallows and Phoebes
If you have the right habitat, barn swallows
and phoebes are easy to attract. It's their nesting
behavior, not their plumage or song, that catches your
attention. These birds tend to nest where you'd rather
not have them: on a ledge right over your front door. To
avoid a mess by your door, offer the birds a nesting
shelf nearby where you'd rather have them.
Flycatchers
The great
crested flycatcher and its western cousin, the
ash-throated flycatcher, are common in wooded suburbs.
Their natural nesting sites are abandoned woodpecker
holes.
These flycatchers may nest in a bird house if it's placed
about ten feet up in a tree in an orchard or at the edge
of a field or stream.
Owls
Most owls
seldom build their own nests. Great horned and long-eared
owls prefer abandoned crow and hawk nests. Other owls
(barred, barn, saw-whet, boreal and screech) nest in tree
cavities and bird houses.
Barn owls are best known for selecting nesting sites near
farms. Where trees are sparse, these birds will nest in
church steeples, silos, and barns. If you live near a
farm or a golf course, try fastening a nest box about 15
feet up on a tree trunk.
Screech owls prefer abandoned woodpecker holes at the
edge of a field or neglected orchard. They will readily
take to a boxes lined with an inch or two of wood
shavings. If you clean the box out in late spring after
the young owls have fledged, you may attract a second
tenant--a kestrel. Trees isolated from larger tracts of
woods have less chance of squirrels taking over the box.
Woodpeckers
You
can attract all the woodpeckers with a suet feeder, but
only the Flicker, Red-bellied, Red-headed, Downy &
Hairy Woodpecker are likely to use a bird house. They
prefer a box with roughened interior and a floor covered
with a two-inch layer of wood chips or coarse sawdust.
Flickers are especially attracted to nest boxes filled
with sawdust, which they "excavate" to suit
themselves.
For best results, place the box high up on a tree trunk
exposed to direct sunlight.
|