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Bird feeder

5.7K views 38 replies 14 participants last post by  JCJCJC  
#1 ·
I recently posted a shot of a beautifully coloured bird, a "28" feeding from a dish supended on three flimsey chains. Well I decided that it was time to make something more comfortable for our local birds to feed from. Here in pictures is what I came up with and how I did it. As is usual for me, unless templates are involved I tend to make things up as I go along consistant with what materials I have to hand. Non of the materials for this project had to be purchased.
 

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#2 · (Edited)
As is obvious, I don't intend to enter this in any architecture design contest!
 

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#3 · (Edited)
I don't know about that Harry. It's structurally sound and is aesthetically attractive to bird's eyes. I think it could hold up to a family of squirrels swinging from it... LOL

Very good looking feeder... and I'm not a bird.

I know what you mean. Our Hummingbird feeders we fill late spring through early fall, when they migrate here. Sharon and I fill the other bird feeders just in the winter, for the birds that decide to stay here through the winter... when the pickings are slim. We decided to fill them to "our schedule," not just when they are empty. We would be much poorer if we did otherwise.
 
#5 ·
Wonderful job, Harry.

I would drip feed the birds, otherwise, as has been said, the cost of feed will be horrendous.........

My brother had one in his yard at Grafton, and he sometimes refilled it 3 times a day. LOL

What are you going to feed with. Different food attracts the Rosella's etc.

BTW, what is a "28"??????
 
#6 ·
PS why do you keep adding to my 'to do' list????? VBG
 
#7 ·
Harry - that is a very nicely produced array of photographs! I think your doves appear similar to the ones up here in Georgia. The millet mentioned by Mike attracts a very beautiful bird species here called an Indigo Bunting. Many other species relish millet, but it seems to be the only seed that brings-on Indigo Buntings in our area. We have quite a few species here that are quite colorful. American Goldfinches come through seasonally and have some seed preferences of their own, but nothing I am aware of attracts them like pecan "meats". If I were a bird you would get a regular visit from me.
 
#8 ·
Very nice, Harry! Love it! :wub: Question on the sheeting: is it Metal? And I know you stated you used only materials you had on hand, but just wondering (though you probably didn't have it on hand, thus why you didn't use it...) but why not shingles (most home owners have some laying around from the last roofing project they did, or a neighbor's)?
 
#11 ·
Very nice, Harry! Love it! :wub: Question on the sheeting: is it Metal? And I know you stated you used only materials you had on hand, but just wondering (though you probably didn't have it on hand, thus why you didn't use it...) but why not shingles (most home owners have some laying around from the last roofing project they did, or a neighbor's)?
I recently visited the warehouse of this company and was invited to help myself to offcuts, which I of course did!
Advanced Architectural Products - Danpalon Multicell

The panels are VERY light in weight and cut like a hot knife through butter.

I very rarely buy wood because when I retired in 2000 I advised all my friends and relations that I would be happy and greatful to receive donations of wood and metal and supplies have been steady ever since and surprisingly the quality has been improving!
 

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#10 ·
Actually Mike whilst most houses here do have terracotta roof tiles our roof is colourbond (corrugated metal with a factory finished pale green colour, but available in many colours). Even if it did have shingles Barb. I'm far too lazy to go to that trouble.
 
#14 ·
Thank you one and all for your generous comments. I actually use "wild bird seed" from the supermarket and feed them alternate days so that they don't become dependent on me by losing their ability to forage for food, including nasty insects in our garden!
 
#15 ·
Harry, nice job. But if you were in the US the proper name for that would be squirrel feeder, not bird feeder. :sarcastic: It is very, very, difficult to construct a bird feeder that squirrels cannot get into, one way or another.
 
#16 ·
An honest dump question = do you not have squirrels to deal with in Australia - if I put a bird feeder as accessible and open as that in my back yard there would be 10 squirrels pigging out in it within 10 minutes and nothing left in the feeder 8 minutes after that. what they don't eat goes scattered on the ground.
 
#18 ·
An honest dump question = do you not have squirrels to deal with in Australia - if I put a bird feeder as accessible and open as that in my back yard there would be 10 squirrels pigging out in it within 10 minutes and nothing left in the feeder 8 minutes after that. what they don't eat goes scattered on the ground.
The only squirrels that I've seen in the 48 years that I've been here in Western Australia were at the Perth zoo where they were running up and down the Palm trees.
 
#17 ·
lol shingling is easy and if it didn't have to be done up so high off the ground I would prolly be willin to do it for a living. (I don't do heights lol). But I love the birdhouse was just curious of the material for the roof.
 
#19 ·
PPS, I notice, Harry, that you are back to your usual joyful self posting 20 images at a time.

How did you finally resolve this issue?

PPSS: I found the "28" on the web...
 
#20 ·
PPS, I notice, Harry, that you are back to your usual joyful self posting 20 images at a time.

How did you finally resolve this issue?

PPSS: I found the "28" on the web...
When logging on the forum I'm now using IE but with each browser I'm getting the occasional crash but I'm learning to suppress the expletives!
 
#22 ·
Very nice birdfeeder, Harry.

I will not install one at home because there are many blackbirds here that use to eat my dogs´meals. They start to make some noise at the garage when we don´t put the dogs platters filled with food.

Since the dog´s food is very hard, they put the grains into water to make it soft and eat. Very clever animals!!!
 
#24 ·
Bird feeder made from waney-edged boards

Very nice build Harry, well done. I like to build bird feeders and nest boxes from waney-edged boards and off-cuts, keeping them as rugged and rustic-looking as I can. Here's one I made lately for a dear friend of mine for a birthday gift, poking a gentle laugh at her trademark!!! All her friends want a similar one now. The 'perch' is made from an old aluminium sign.

I use a Kaindl woodcarving wheel on a grinder, kind-of like a chainsaw tooth pattern, to roughly hollow the middle of the deck to keep the birdseed from blowing away in the wind. The support is an off-cut from a plastic tube that comes with silage-wrap, and it fits nicely over a light-duty fence post - job done.

I don't think I used a router on this project - this is rough woodwork ;)

John
 

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#30 ·
Thanks Harry - making these things is so rough I'd be embarrassed to show anyone the banging and slapping that goes on! They are literally thrown-together projects from off-cuts I get for free from my wood miller, I seek out the bits with some bark left. The setting-out tool is the Mk 1 eyeball, mostly :)

Anyway, here are two birds from my own garden in Ireland - a blackbird looking splendid in the breeding season, and a blackcap which is a rare winter visitor. My photography is fairly traditional, these were shot on a Canon T90 film camera with a 400mm lens and an infra-red remote control.

John
 

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#26 ·
Alex, because of the saying that someone is a "bird brain", I used to think that birds in fact couldn't think logically but you have proved that not to be so. We do have crows here, BIG, black and scary! Fortunately I've only seen one of them that landed in the tree where the doves live and I ran out clapping my hands and it flew off.

Bob, I always thought that, like me, you were a softie at heart!