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Landscape
Design + Consultation
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Landscaping for Wildlife
About the Designer |
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Gardening for Birds:
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Landscaping for Wildlife
Links
about Birds

Quiet seat amidst
naturalized plantings |
"the
yard looks great! i really like it. the bird bath is awesome too. i
am really excited about how the yard has turned out! thanks again".
--S. M., Oregon City

Natural landscaping against greenbelt creates bird-watching haven
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Bird Feeders and Birdbaths |
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As a landscape designer, I commonly use birdbaths and feeders as
attractive garden accents, and try to find just the right size and style
to go with my client's design. There are a few important things to know
about maintaining these for the optimum health of our birds, and they
include the following:
1.) Water level in birdbaths
should be no more than 3 inches deep.
2.) Keep the water clean, hose out daily if possible. This
will prevent spread of disease among the birds, and the proliferation of
mosquitoes which breed in stagnant water.
3.) In winter, it may be necessary to heat a birdbath to prevent it from
icing over. Many birdbaths will crack if filled with water that
freezes, and birds still need water in wintertime.
4.) To keep predatory cats from feasting on birds while they're stopping
at your feeder, it may be necessary and effective to put a small fence
around the base of the feeder. This could be made of bent twigs
for a rustic effect. Just making the cat have to jump over the
small obstacle seems to help the birds get away in time.
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"Landscaping
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Wildlife" main page |
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Bird Strikes on Windows:
According to the Audubon Society
of Portland, one billion birds die each year in the United States
due to collisions with windows.
How to prevent bird strikes:
1.) Don't place bird
feeders directly in front of windows or attach feeders to
windows. They may fly into the window if suddenly spooked. 2.) Buy hawk silhouettes or owl decoys and put them on or near
windows. 3.) Have plantings in front of the windows if possible. 4.) For a temporary solution to a persistent seasonal problem,
such as springtime bird madness, you may need to cover the
window with masking tape or Post-it notes, even a sheet, just
something that will make the window look more like a wall. 5.) You could use fine mesh bird netting like the type used over
fruit trees over the window, or hang wind socks in front of it. 6.) Birds don't always die after striking a window, and may be
just temporarily dazed. You can put the stricken bird in a
covered, cloth-lined box for an hour, and then release
immediately if it revives. 7.) For other more serious injuries, contact the Portland
Audubon Society Wildlife Care Center at 503-292-0304 for more
information.

Raptor
silhouettes for windows
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Links About Birds:
Fabulous
websites with much more specific information about protecting and nurturing
birds in our home environments.

Bird Banner courtesy
of Audubon at Home
Patricia Acheff,
APLD
503-531-3947
contact@visionscapesnorthwest.com
Copyright 2008 by Visionscapes
Northwest. All rights reserved.
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