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Attracting
Cardinals to Your Yard
Cardinals usually are the first birds to feed in
the morning and the last to feed at night. They
need a feeder with a roomy tray or open bird
table because they require ample space to perch
comfortably. They often feed from the ground.
Cardinals eat a variety of foods: sunflower
seed, safflower seed, cracked corn, suet, suet
mixtures, peanut hearts, peanuts and nutmeats of
all kinds. They also like melon seeds, pieces of
raisins and banana, cornbread and white bread.
If you want to set up a feeder for just
cardinals and maybe some small birds such as
chickadees, set your feeder in the midst of a
bush or shrub, no higher than that bush or
shrub. Cardinals nest in bushes and they love to
eat in a secluded place. Replicating cardinals'
preferred habitat by your feeding set-up is one
way to keep other large birds, such as doves and
pigeons away because they are too large to use a
feeder located in this fashion.
Water also plays a very important part in
attracting cardinals and other birds, both in
summer and winter.
If you are lucky enough to have more than one
pair of cardinals at your feeding station, you
may see one or two males trying to keep all the
others from the feeding tray. This is very
common among finches - the family of birds to
which the cardinal belongs. However, sooner or
later every one gets its turn. Even the male
cardinal who won't let his mate eat with him all
winter eventually relents. When spring comes he
begins to regard his mate in a new light.
Instead of chasing her from the feeding tray, he
now begins to offer her shucked sunflower seeds
and other choice tidbits. When the cardinals
have their young they will bring them to the
feeder and teach them how to feed themselves.
(source:
duncraft.com)
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The brilliant red of a male cardinal is a
familiar and welcomed site in Maryland
backyards.
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