You might have already started planning your Christmas meal but have you thought about what you’ll feed the birds?

The RSPB has put together some tips to help you share the festive celebrations with the birds outside your window! 

Festive treats to feed the birds

Many of the foods we eat are also big hits with birds, especially during the colder months when there are fewer natural food sources available and they need extra calories to stay warm. 

Try sprinkling some of these treats on your bird table and see what turns up. You might see your local robin, or a swirl of starlings. Or you could be lucky enough to see a winter migrant bird such as a redwing sampling your offerings. 

Here are some ideas from the RSPB: 

  • Cheese – mild grated cheese is a classic hit with robins, dunnocks, blackbirds and song thrushes. 
  • Unsalted bacon rind – chopping it up means a lot of birds will be able to have a nibble. Magpies and crows are liable to fly off with the whole lump if not well-anchored! Make sure there’s no salt in it as it is toxic to birds. 
  • Ripe or bruised apples and pears – thrushes, tits and starlings are big fans.  
  • Pastry – uncooked or cooked, either is good as long as it’s made with real fats. 
  • Dried fruit – raisins, sultanas and currants are favourites with blackbirds, song thrushes and robins (they can be dangerous to dogs and cats so this is one to avoid if you have pets in the area). 

In terms of drinks, water is key for birds, both to drink and to clean their feathers so they’re in tip-top condition to fly and keep themselves warm.

How to Put on a Festive Feast for Birds this Christmas
Blue tit Cyanistes caeruleus, adult perched on wooden gate post, Sherwood Forest National Nature Reserve. Photo: Ben Andrew (rspb-images.com)

Birds can find it harder to find water in the winter, however, as ponds start to freeze, so they’ll always appreciate a bird bath. Even a dustbin lid with some stones at the bottom for grip will do the job! If you find the water keeps freezing, try floating a ping pong ball on the surface – the slightest gust of wind will keep the ball moving and stop the water turning to ice. 

What NOT to feed them

Not everything we eat is good for birds, however. Here are some foods to avoid: 

  • Anything with salt – salt is toxic to birds, so make sure to keep it off your bird table and don’t put salt in your bird baths to keep it ice-free.  
  • Cooking fat – leftover fat from your Sunday roast could smear onto birds’ feathers and ruin their waterproofing and insulating qualities. It can be great for a stock though! 
  • Cooked porridge oats – they are glutinous and can harden around a bird’s beak. 
  • Milk – birds can’t digest milk so it can make them seriously ill. 
  • Dried coconut – it can swell up in their stomach and make them sick.  

Take part in the Big Garden Birdwatch

You can also help the birds in your neighbourhood by taking part in the Big Garden Birdwatch.

Every year for the past four decades the RSPB has asked people to look out their window or head to their local park and let them know what birds are seen over the course of an hour. This helps the charity to keep track of how garden birds are faring, and last year a record-breaking one million people joined in! 

You can take part on the 28, 29, or 30 January 2022, so for your FREE Big Garden Birdwatch guide, which includes a RSPB shop voucher and advice on how to help you attract wildlife to your garden, text BIRD to 70030 or visit www.rspb.org.uk/birdwatch. Registration opens 8 December 2021.  

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About Author

Nisha Kotecha is the Founder of Good News Shared. Having worked and volunteered for charities in the UK for over 10 years, Nisha is on a mission to highlight how amazing charities are.

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