make your own bird seed cylinders

Bird seed cylinders can be a bit expensive to buy, especially when the birds discover the treats in your yard! Maybe you just like to make things yourself. This is a fairly easy way to make your own bird seed cylinders at very little cost. You just need a food processor, a kitchen scale (optional) a minimal number of ingredients, and empty plastic water bottles.

Tips to make bird seed cylinders easily

Have everything out, measured, and ready to grab. The mixture for the seed cylinders is hot and sets up fairly quickly, so the bottles need to be packed quickly.

Cut the tops off the bottles at the point where it starts to narrow.

You can use birdseed without shells. You can substitute other ingredients for the birdseed. Try nuts, seeds, and dried fruits. I will only use nuts or trail mix that has no salt, spices or seasoning, and have not been roasted in oil. Nuts roasted in oil can become rancid, and the birds won’t like them. You can use nuts that are raw or have been dry roasted.

Wear latex or rubber gloves.The easiest way to pack the mixture into the bottles is with your hands, and the sugar syrup is hot and can burn.

Once packed into the bottles, the mixture can take a while to set up. You can put them into the refrigerator to speed up the time for them to harden.

You can store the packed cylinders in the freezer if you don’t go through them quickly.

When the bird seed cylinders have hardened, just cut them open with scissors and dispose of the bottles.

Tools you’ll need to make bird seed cylinders

kitchen scale (you can use measuring cups, but a scale is much easier)

food processor

heavy saucepan

latex or other disposable gloves

empty plastic water bottles with the tops cut off

easiest way to hang seed cylinders

I use a small  lantern-style cage cylinder feeder from Wild Birds Unlimited. Just pop the top off and drop the seed cylinder in. The other cylinder feeders are made for the commercially made hard seed cylinders with a center hole. I tried those but found that the larger birds would manage to break off large chunks of the seed cylinder. After that, I was mostly feeding pigeons.

bird-watching in Albuquerque

Bird watchers love to feed the birds in their yards at home. They also like to look for the local birds when they travel. There are plenty of places for bird-watching in and around Albuquerque. If you like, you can even arrange a personalized bird-watching tour.

bird-watching at the Bottger Mansion of Old Town

Our yard has become a haven for local birds. Finches and goldfinches are here year-round. Hummingbirds spend the summer with us from mid-April to mid-September. Robins arrive in the spring, and Northern Flickers stay for a couple of weeks in the fall to eat the berries on the Chinese pistache tree. Pigeons are always around in cities, but they disappear when Socks and Graycat patrol the yard. We’ve had a pair of nuthatches all year–I hear their calls high up in the trees but haven’t seen them yet. The yard can become suddenly still and quiet when a Sharp-Shinned Hawk, Cooper’s Hawk or a falcon arrives.

 

 

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