Grow love this Valentine’s Day with a sustainable gift that lasts. Plant Trees
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How to Attract Songbirds and Wildlife
The presence of wildlife can make a backyard or woodlot a special place for your family. As urban and suburban development displaces many birds and animals from their natural habitat, it becomes increasingly important for landowners to provide mini-sanctuaries for wild birds and other wildlife.
![birds sitting on a bird feeder](/sites/inkatana.com/files/styles/embed_large/public/media/2024-11/hero-tree-resource-backyardwoods-how-attract-songbirds-and-wildlife.jpg.webp)
Working with the principles on these pages can help you provide habitat that will attract birds and wildlife to your home.
Provide Space for Living
Just a bush or two and a few trees won’t do. Birds and wildlife need room to move about and enough variety in plant species to provide year-round food. This plan shows wildlife-friendly plantings in a larger lot.
Provide Cover
Birds and small animals need concealed places for nesting and hiding, protected from the eyes of predators. In a backyard setting, such places can be provided by. . .
- Planting conifers (evergreens), preferably in a group.
- Growing hedges with low branches.
- Planting ground cover instead of lawn in several areas.
- Planting shrubs and plants with overhanging branches.
- Using prickly or thorny plants in a few areas.
Provide Water
No matter what their individual food preferences may be, all birds and animals need a dependable source of water close by. This can be supplied in your yard by creating a small pool or birdbath in a protected place. Even a dripping tap will help.
Provide Food
Having a wide variety of trees with high food value is the single best way to increase your pleasure from viewing wildlife. Champion wildlife feeders include:
Summer Fruit
- Cherries
- Dogwoods
- Plums
- Apricots
Seeds
- Ashes
- Birches
- Firs
- Hemlock
- Maples
- Spruces
- Sweetgum
Nuts & Acorns
- Butternut
- Black Walnut
- Chestnuts
- Hazels
- Hickories
- Oaks
- Pecans
Fall & Winter Fruit These are especially important to help wildlife through the worst part of the year and to save early-arriving summer birds that get caught in late-season snowstorms.
- Apples
- Crabapples
- Dogwoods
- Hackberry
- Hawthorns
- Mountain Ash
Create Variety
Good natural habitat features variety — in plant species, in slopes and terrain, in plant height, and in transition between plant communities.