There鈥檚 a certain satisfaction in autumn chores. When the weather鈥檚 right, cleaning gutters, touching up paint, or splitting some firewood can feel less like manual labor and more like a rite of the season.
But if you want to make your backyard a welcoming winter haven for birds, some fall tasks call for a laissez-faire approach. 鈥淢essy is definitely good to provide food and shelter for birds during the cold winter months,鈥 says Tod Winston, 爆料公社鈥檚 Plants for Birds program manager.
So let someone else keep up with the neighbors this weekend. Sleep in, linger a little longer with your morning coffee, and follow these tips for a bird-friendly yard you can be proud of.
Save the seeds. When fall arrives, some tidy-minded gardeners might be inclined to snip the stems of perennials in the flower garden. But the seed heads of coneflowers, black-eyed Susans, and other native wildflowers provide a helpful food cache for birds. 鈥淭hey鈥檙e almost invisible, those seeds, but birds eat them all winter long,鈥 Winston says. Grasses鈥攏ot the stuff you mow, but native species like bluestems or gramas鈥攁lso make for good foraging after they go to seed. And letting other dead plants stick around can fill your property with protein-packed bird snacks in the form of insect larvae, such as the fly and wasp larvae that inhabit .
Leave the leaves. You can help birds and other wildlife鈥攁nd save yourself some backache and blisters鈥攂y skipping the leaf raking. 鈥淭hose leaves are important because they rot and enrich the soil, and also provide places for bugs and birds to forage for food,鈥 Winston says. If a fully hands-off approach doesn鈥檛 work for your yard, consider composting some leaves and letting the rest be. You could also rake them from the lawn to your garden beds, or mulch them with a mower to nourish your lawn.
Leaf litter isn鈥檛 just free fertilizer鈥攊t鈥檚 also a pretty happening patch of habitat for a variety of critters such as salamanders, snails, worms, and toads. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e digging in the garden and come upon these squirmy little coppery-brown dudes, and you don鈥檛 know what they are鈥攖hose are moth pupae,鈥 Winston says. A healthy layer of undisturbed soil and leaf litter means more moths, which in their caterpillar phase are a crucial food source for birds.
Build a brush pile. Along with shaking loose showers of leaves, blustery fall days also tend to knock down tree limbs. Rather than hauling them away, you can use fallen branches to build a brush pile that will shelter birds from lousy weather and predators. American Tree Sparrows, Black-capped Chickadees, and other wintering birds will appreciate the protection from the elements. Rabbits, snakes, and other wildlife also will take refuge there. You鈥檒l find that the pile settles and decomposes over the seasons ahead, making room for next year鈥檚 additions. (And it鈥檚 a great place to dispose of your Christmas tree.)
Skip the chemicals. You might see your neighbors spreading 鈥渨eed and feed鈥 mixtures in the fall to fertilize their lawns and knock back crabgrass and other unwanted plants. In most cases, though, grass clippings and mulched leaf litter provide plenty of plant nutrition, and using store-bought fertilizers only encourages more non-native plants to grow. Generally speaking, native grasses, shrubs, trees, and flowering plants don鈥檛 need chemical inputs. Save a few bucks and keep your yard healthy for bugs and birds.
Hit the nursery. Although laziness can be a good thing when it comes to creating a bird-friendly backyard, it鈥檚 worth putting in some hard work planting native shrubs and trees. (Cooler temperatures also make fall a more comfortable time to tear out some turf grass and expand your native plant garden.) Native dogwoods, hawthorns, sumacs, and other flowering shrubs produce small fruits that not only feed birds during the colder months, but can also provide a welcome pop of color when winter gets drab. Planted in the right place, evergreens like cedars and firs give birds something to eat and a cozy shelter. Fall is also a great time to liven up your property with late-blooming perennials such as asters or sages鈥攁nd to buy spring- and summer-blooming wildflowers at a substantial discount.
To find species suited to your yard, just enter your ZIP code in 爆料公社鈥檚 native plants database. If you plant trees or shrubs this fall, they might not bear fruit this year鈥攂ut come next winter, you and your backyard birds will be glad you did.