If you are looking to be more exclusive with your bird feeding, Safflower may be the solution for you.
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Safflower Seed: Sunflower-eating birds love Safflower squirrels and blackbirds typically don’t. We recommending using our WBU Bird Bug Bites Suet and No-Melt Dough in a caged suet feeder or upside down suet feeder (shown below) since this suet has the best overall appeal to woodpeckers, and our WBU Simply Suet® in our WBU EcoTough® Double Tail Prop Suet Feeder for Pileated Woodpeckers for any larger woodpeckers that choose not to stretch into the cage. An added bonus is that squirrels don't care much for WBU Simply Suet® either! Only now and then do we hear of starlings eating them, usually out of complete desperation but we hear many great success stories from many people who come back to buy more, having had no starlings bother them at all. WBU Simply Suet®: WBU Simply Suet® does not have much appeal to European Starlings. Offer Foods with Less Appeal: There are a few foods which are less palatable to blackbirds and using these in feeders that don't have guards on them can help discourage these birds from taking over. Here are our 3 Rules for Keeping out Starlings and Blackbirdsġ. filled with seeds or grains), but will devour most common seeds readily. They are less likely to bother suet, unless it is of poor quality (i.e. The other blackbirds are more traditional seed eaters.
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If those aren't available, they will even force themselves to eat hard shelled seeds. Fortunately, we do have a few tricks to eliminate Starlings from some feeders, and to slow them down at others, so your other birds can get their share of food, too. Their beaks are not designed for cracking hard seed shells, so they go first for the softer suet cakes, peanuts, and other foods without shells. Red-winged Blackbirds (Agelaius phoeniceus) - Leftīrown-headed Cowbirds (Molothrus ater) - Right, Photo by Kristen MartynĮuropean Starlings' preferred diet consists primarily of insects and berries, but if these are hard to find, they turn to our feeders instead. *While not technically correct, all three species are commonly lumped under the term "Blackbird," and for simplicity we will use the term throughout the article unless specific clarification needs to be made.Įuropean Starlings (Sturnus vulgaris) - Left, Photo by Kristen MartynĬommon Grackles (Quiscalus quiscula) - Right Red-winged Blackbirds ( Agelaius phoeniceus) and Brown-headed Cowbirds ( Molothrus ater) are other native blackbirds who may visit your feeders. Ĭommon Grackles ( Quiscalus quiscula), who are black with a purple-blue sheen to their heads and black beaks, are our most common blackbirds. Their beaks are dark in winter and yellow in summer (shown below). These species can inundated many a backyard feeder. European Starlings ( Sturnus vulgaris) are a non-native species and are not related to our native blackbirds. How do I stop Starlings, Grackles and Blackbirds*?