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birdhouses

keets

5 year old buck +
Well, It's mid winter , and this morning I thought .....should I build some birdhouses for my new orchard plot.....SO,....I'm wondering If cabin fever has overtaken my brain, or do some of you guys see this as beneficial for your areas??
 
Not sure if there is a big impact, but if I was building bird houses for species that are insect eaters I might not put those in my orchard area. Insects are necessary for good pollination.
 
Well, It's mid winter , and this morning I thought .....should I build some birdhouses for my new orchard plot.....SO,....I'm wondering If cabin fever has overtaken my brain, or do some of you guys see this as beneficial for your areas??
Yes I think it would help the birds but it would also add to the enjoyment of the farm. A bluebird box or a tree swallow box that you can open to view the babies and watch the parents bringing in food is like listening to a bullfrog. I have put up dozens of boxes and most are used the first year if you do a little research on what the species likes. Kids love checking out the eggs and chicks, my bunch never gets tired of it. Birds are territorial so you would just need one box in the orchard and I think with one box there would be plenty of pollinators left, besides most fruit blooms before the chicks hatch and they are using the box. Do it
 
I do the exact opposite. I kill big mature trees so hawks and owls have places to sit and hunt. I don't want birds or rodents in my orchard at all. I also fell old beech trees near my fruit trees to make the cavities unattractive to raccoons and cavity nesters.

Lots of birds eat insects, many of which are beneficial to fruit trees. Rodents like voles and mice like to burrow under mulch and snow and eat the bark off apple trees. Rabbits are very efficient tree killers too.

Woodpeckers will strip a cherry tree of fruit in a day. Thrushes and magpies eat my cherries and peck holes in my apples and knock them off the trees. They also eat my gooseberries and currants. And they love to do all this right before the fruit is ripe.

And don't forget the arch nemesis of fruit trees, the yellow-bellied sapsucker, is a cavity nester, so any birdhouse in an orchard would be a dream come true.

I did, however, build a few dozen birdhouses through the years and put them in the forests and grasslands to encourage more birds to live near the places I used to frequent. I might some day put up a few more bluebird houses with tar-treated roof boards to see if that might help me see more of them. The last few "birdhouses" I built were actually mallard tubes for the neighborhood and the local Hunting Association's terrain.

My indoor free time in winter is generally spent reading about hunting, habitat work, and guns and trying too find bargains online. Otherwise I'm in the garage cutting up pallets, cleaning up, and practicing welding.
 
Yes I think it would help the birds but it would also add to the enjoyment of the farm. A bluebird box or a tree swallow box that you can open to view the babies and watch the parents bringing in food is like listening to a bullfrog. I have put up dozens of boxes and most are used the first year if you do a little research on what the species likes. Kids love checking out the eggs and chicks, my bunch never gets tired of it. Birds are territorial so you would just need one box in the orchard and I think with one box there would be plenty of pollinators left, besides most fruit blooms before the chicks hatch and they are using the box. Do it

Oh I forgot about those viewing type birdhouses. I recently inherited one with a camera. I need to dig that out and get it running. Not sure what species it's for, though. I'll put it out and see what I get. Maybe I can get a pair of great tits to watch this summer. We have a lot of great tits in Norway!

And before you ask, great tits are birds:

 
We all have different reasoning. lol

I put up a bird house (that I had laying around the house for years) along the trail on my property, basically as a sign to the locals and trespassers that this isn't just some abandoned piece of land.
 
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