Building Birdhouses And Nest Boxes For Cavity-Nesting Birds
Posted by Directinc in NatureBirds need protective cover just like people need the shelter of a house. With more and more destruction of their natural habitat, many birds are having trouble finding places to nest. By providing nesting boxes or birdhouses you will encourage birds to raise their young in your backyard and stay in your area year round. You’ll enjoy watching their family life while providing them badly needed shelter.
When you place a nesting box in your backyard, you’re inviting birds to raise their families in front of your very eyes. You’ll see birds courting mates, building nests, laying eggs and feeding young. And when it’s time for the fledglings to leave the nest, they will likely learn to feed at your feeders and bathe at your birdbaths, fountains, waterfalls and ponds!
Birds build open-cup shaped nests in trees or on the ground, or they nest in natural cavities (holes) in trees. The birds that choose natural cavities are called cavity-nesting birds. These cavity-nesting birds will readily use a nest box if it is the right size, with the right size entrance hole and in the right habitat. Birds you can attract with a nest box include: bluebirds, wrens, chickadees, titmice, nuthatches, woodpeckers, Purple Martins, swallows, owls, American Kestrels and Wood Ducks.
Building birdhouses according to proper specifications, placing them in the ‘best’ habitat and maintaining the houses regularly can benefit both the birds and us. However, if not built and placed properly, you might have no bird visitors at all. If you want to save time and money and make your own beautiful and practical birdhouses that birds will use year after year there are some basic rules you need to follow.
Make sure you don’t use any type of pressure treated wood. It is toxic to birds. If you use recycled wood, make sure it was not treated with creosote or painted with paint containing lead. If in doubt don’t use it!
Don’t put perches on any birdhouse. Only house sparrows and European starlings prefer perches. If you have a house with a perch, remove it.
Provide a hinged side or roof so the house can be easily checked and cleaned each season. This is vital to monitoring nest boxes. You can leave the clean nest box up through the winter to give birds a dry place to roost at night but you have to have a hinged opening to check in on the nestlings during breeding season.
At least four 1/4 inch diameter drain holes should be drilled in the bottom of every house. Also at least two holes should be drilled near the top of the right and left sides of all bird houses or a 1/4 inch space left between the sides and the roof to provide ventilation. Providing adequate ventilation is especially important for small bird houses.
To construct a long lasting birdhouse use exterior screws instead of nails. Use galvanized nails to build houses only if necessary, but remember that they loosen up as wood expands and contracts in extreme weather conditions. Also the top-front edge of a bird house should overhang at least two inches to help protect the entrance hole from wind-driven rain and to keep cats and racoons from reaching in from above.
Make sure the sides of your bird house enclose the floorboard; don’t nail them to the top of the floorboard. This arrangement prevents rain from seeping between the sides and the floor and then into the nest. Recess the floorboard at least 1/4, up from the bottom of the sides to help prevent deterioration caused by moisture.
Wood is by far the best material for birdhouses. Softwood such as pine is fine for smaller nests, but cedar, redwood or cypress should be used for larger boxes. Make sure your construction will not injure the birds, no protruding screw or nail points.
He is an active member of the Audubon Society and is the Shasta County Coordinator for the California Bluebird Recovery Program. For more info go to www.TheBirdersReport.com











