Two starlings bathing 🐦✨💦
https://loops.video/v/7O-53YlfAX

#loops #birdBaths

A pair of starlings bathin... - @otterX | Loops.video

A pair of starlings... • 15 likes • 0 comments

A good reminder, @MaQuest ! TY for posting this!

#SolarPunkSunday #Birds #BirdBaths #Gardens

10 Things Nobody Tells You About Bird Baths

We asked two backyard habitat experts for their best tips on how to choose, clean, and care for bird baths. (There's more to it than you think.)

Gardenista

Here are some tips if you decide to put out a #BirdFeeder

Your wildlife questions are answered by
#MaineAudubon Staff Naturalist Doug Hitchcox.
Posted December 21, 2024

"Let’s start with the classic: “should you even feed birds?” The easy answer is “Yes,” but it is important to acknowledge that this comes with more responsibility than I think most people are aware of. Primarily, if you are going to be feeding birds, you need to also make sure that your feeders and the seeds in them are clean, generally kept dry, and are not going to be harmful to the birds. Cleaning the feeders once every two weeks is typically adequate to ensure that no bacteria is growing or to help prevent disease from spreading, but this will vary. If it is warm or wet, you’ll want to clean more often, or if you are seeing a sick bird at the feeder, like one with avian conjunctivitis, then you’ll want to clean the feeder and maybe pause feeding for a week or two."

Read more:
https://www.centralmaine.com/2024/12/21/here-are-some-tips-if-you-decide-to-put-out-a-bird-feeder/

Archived version:
https://archive.md/cWFuk#selection-1823.0-1847.11
#BirdFeeders #Birdbaths #AvianInfluenza #AvianFlu #BirdFlu #H5N1

Here are some tips if you decide to put out a bird feeder

Your wildlife questions are answered by Maine Audubon Staff Naturalist Doug Hitchcox.

Kennebec Journal and Morning Sentinel

Three Easy but Important Ways to Keep Your #BirdFeeders Disease-Free

Make sure you're helping, not harming, your feathered visitors with these simple steps.

By National Audubon Society
Updated April 24, 2024

"Feeding birds is a wonderful way to help avian visitors fuel up for migration or make it through a tough winter. It can also provide great opportunities for wildlife photography and observation. But it’s not enough to put out a feeder and fill it regularly. You need to clean it out, or you risk inadvertently causing the birds that visit to get sick. The same goes for #birdbaths.

"Some of the more common diseases that birds can spread through feeders include #HouseFinchEyeDisease (the colloquial name for mycoplasmal conjunctivitis, which can infect more than just the bird for which it’s named), #salmonellosis (caused by salmonella bacteria), #aspergillosis (a fungal respiratory disease), #AvianPox, and #AvianFlu. If you see a sick bird or one you suspect died from a disease outbreak, don’t pick it up or try to treat it yourself. Instead, contact your local #WildlifeRehabilitator or call the National Wildlife Health Center for instructions.

"To prevent the spread of illness in the birds that frequent your seed buffet, try these three steps:

1. Clean feeders regularly
The National Wildlife Health Center recommends cleaning bird baths and feeders with a solution of nine parts water to one part bleach. (If there is visible debris, such as feces, scrub it off before soaking in the bleach solution.) Dry out the feeder before hanging it back up. Project FeederWatch, a joint effort between Cornell Lab of Ornithology and Birds Canada, recommends cleaning seed feeders every two weeks or so. Double the frequency of cleaning if you suspect the presence of disease at all. It's always better to be safe than sorry.

2. Tidy below the feeder
This can mean raking or shoveling up feces and hulls (seed casings)—particularly those that are moldy, wet, or spoiled—and throwing them out, Project Feederwatch recommends. That’ll also help prevent scattered food from attracting rodents. On snow-covered lawns, scraping off a few layers of white stuff should do the trick.

3. Share the wealth
Disease spreads more easily in confined spaces and when groups are concentrated, so having multiple feeders can help prevent disease. Spreading out food among a few feeders provides less opportunities for sick birds to touch and contaminate others, says the National Wildlife Health Center."

https://www.audubon.org/news/three-easy-important-ways-keep-your-bird-feeder-disease-free
#H5N1 #AvianInfluenza #BirdFlu

Three Easy but Important Ways to Keep Your Bird Feeders Disease-Free

Make sure you're helping, not harming, your feathered visitors with these simple steps.

Audubon

Focussing on one of those vulnerable species that we won’t find on a local walk. A particularly iconic and highly vulnerable example, here in Canada, are Caribou - in Europe these are Santa’s Reindeer, and who wants to see them going into extinction or living out diminished lives in sanctuaries and zoos.

https://1001species.substack.com/p/saving-santas-reindeer-in-quebec?r=i27s&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&triedRedirect=true

#conservation #caribou #quebec #wildlife #birdbaths #gardens

Saving Santa’s Reindeer in Québec

1001 Species … including Caribou

1001 Species - Naturally About Nature

Transform your outdoor space into a serene haven with the best bird baths from The Stone Studio. Our bird baths are masterfully crafted with intricate details and stunning designs that will elevate any garden or patio.

Check the product on: https://www.thestonestudio.in/product/stone-bird-bath/

#GardenElegance #BirdBaths #OutdoorLiving #StoneStudio #GardenArt #BirdLovers #OutdoorDecor #NatureInspired #GardenDesign #PatioPerfect #BackyardBliss #GardenFeatures #BirdWatching

Stone Bird Bath 3ft: Buy Best Garden Decor - The Stone Studio

Explore The Stone Studio's extensive garden decor collection & discover beautifully crafted stone bird bath & garden idols. Shop now.

The Stone Studio
Bevor Sie zu YouTube weitergehen

A Murder (of Crows) Splashing Around in the Water by the Beach

YouTube