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<link>http://www.articletrader.com/</link>
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<title>How Vital Is Your Backyard Bird Garden To Song Birds?</title>
<link>http://www.articletrader.com/home-and-family/gardening/how-vital-is-your-backyard-bird-garden-to-song-birds.html</link>
<guid>http://www.articletrader.com/home-and-family/gardening/how-vital-is-your-backyard-bird-garden-to-song-birds.html</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 30 Mar 2007 00:00:00 -0500</pubDate>
<description><![CDATA[ All yards can, potentially, be natural habitats for birds.<br><br>Even though our neighborhoods occupy what was once their natural habitat, it needn't be a catastrophe. The right selection and location of plants will offer a nearly natural habitat for song birds. <br><br>Surprisingly, wild birds readily accept this substitution, and our backyard bird gardens become an extension of the surrounding natural habitat.<br><br>Making your backyard into a bird garden can be the focus of many family activities. In fact, just watching and feeding songbirds is a great way for the entire family to become aware of bird conservation. <br><br>Keep in mind that those family members with limited mobility can still enjoy nature from the deck or patio, even a window. Imagine the benefits of a bird garden for seniors and shut-ins, and for the ill or disabled.<br><br>Bird gardens are perfect natural habitat classrooms. Learning about the different bird species in your area can be lots of fun. <br><br>An essential tool is a good, easy-to-use field guide, such as Birds of North America, or Peterson's East and West. Search online for the term "bird field guides" for more information. <br><br>You will learn that birds are grouped according to physical characteristics. For example, distinguishing a crow from a turkey is obvious just by looking at them. <br><br>These characteristics are helpful in identifying the birds that visit your backyard bird habitat : Overall size ; Shape of their bodies; Coloring; Specific markings; Shapes of their beaks; Shape of their wings and their feet while in flight. <br><br>Your family, especially the kids, will soon become experts at recognizing bird calls. While each species is unique, most are quite obvious. A Sparrow's "chipping" is quite plain when compared to a Cardinal's lovely "trilling" song.<br><br>From a bird's-eye view, a natural bird habitat can actually be a neighborhood of backyards... and each backyard gardener contributes to the success of this unique bird habitat. <br><br>So, the question remains... just how vital is your individual backyard garden to wild birds? <br><br>If you have selected and located your plantings correctly, wild birds will be as comfortable in your backyard as they would be in the wild.<br><br>Undeniably, the answer is... you and your bird garden are unquestionably vital to their survival!<br /><br />--<br />Susan Nelson Hopkins is an online gardening expert from Carlsbad, NM and writes for a unique group of websites at http://www.susansgardens.com . She specializes in creating gardens that will attract birds. For an original version of this and other gardening articles, visit http://www.susansbirdgardens.com/cs-pro/spin/?c=gardening . For more bird gardening information, please visit www.susansbirdgardens.com<br><br>Source: <a href="http://www.articletrader.com/">http://www.articletrader.com</a> ]]></description>
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