Do you love bird watching? Attracting birds to your yard means growing plants that attract birds, as well as providing them with water sources. You can create yo ur very own backyard bird sanctuary by adding native trees, shrubs, and flowers to your garden. Provide birds with what they need and watch your yard come alive.
Attracting Wild Birds to the Garden with Plants That Attract Birds
Attracting wild birds to the garden and enjoying backyard birds is easy once you know which plants to include in your landscape that birds love. Native species of trees, shrubs and flowers offer wildlife such as wild birds, butterflies and insects food and shelter. As many habitats disappear under urban sprawl, backyard bird feeding becomes even more critical to preserve and protect many beautiful species.
What Plants Attract Wild Birds?
Birds need water, food, nesting sites and places to hide from predators. Wild birds find what they need in the rural landscape. Nature provides a mixture of fields, mixed species forests, and water sources. As people have built on areas wild birds once used as food sources and nesting sites, birds have been forced to seek sustenance elsewhere.
By providing natural habitats and native species in your backyard landscaping, you’re offering birds a welcome respite from urban sprawl and development, a place to go for food, and shelter for their young. Attracting wild birds to the garden is a fun hobby and adds even more enjoyment to the garden.
Aim for a Variety of Plants for a Backyard Bird Sanctuary
Planting a bird garden to create a backyard bird sanctuary enhances the natural landscape and provides plant sources of food, shelter, nesting materials and more for birds. It takes its cues from the landscape surrounding the garden, enhancing and building upon what nature provides.
Luckily for the average backyard gardener, the habitat humans provide by planting lawns, gardens and foundation plantings creates a landscape most birds enjoy. Walls and fences provide perching places; foundation plants provide shelter, and garden plants provide food, nesting sites and shelter. You don’t need a huge garden to attract birds either; a small backyard is just fine.
Tips for Bird Garden Design
Bird gardens do not follow any one particular style. They may be informal, with simple flowers beds and trees, or formal and meticulously clipped. While birds tend to prefer rough, ragged hedges and naturally shaped plants, they’ll still come for a visit if you love your topiary or your clipped box hedge.
Variety of Plants
The key to planting a landscape that birds love is variety. The ideal bird garden contains some mature, tall trees and some shorter trees. The tall trees provide nesting and resting sites for birds and, depending upon the tree, perhaps nuts and seeds too.
But here’s the best part about planting a garden to attract birds; birds don’t care whether it’s your garden or your next door neighbor’s garden. They fly where they will without regard to boundaries, fences, or property lines.
Plants That Attract Birds: Grow Native Trees
Native species of trees, shrubs and flowers offer good food sources for birds. Such plants often thrive where other species struggle because they’re uniquely suited to the local climate, soil and other conditions. Check with your local County Cooperative Extension office for lists of native species that thrive in your area. Some suggestions for U.S. Zone 7 are offered here.
Native Trees to Support Wild Birds
Good native species of plants to attract wild birds and create a backyard bird sanctuary include:
- American beech (Fagus grandifolia)
- Aspen (Populus tremuloides)
- Beautyberry (Callicarpa americana)
- Birch (Betula spp.)
- Bayberry, blackberry and other berry bushes such as raspberry, blueberry (Various species)
- Cherry (Prunus spp.)
- Crabapple (Malus spp.)
- Dogwoods (Cornus spp.)
- Elderberry (Sambucus spp.)
- Fir (Abies spp.)
- Holly (Ilex spp.)
- Juniper (Juniperus spp.)
- Oak (Quercus spp.)
- Pine (Pinus spp.)
- Serviceberry (Amelanchier spp.)
- Spicebush (Lindera benzoin)
- Viburnum (Viburnum spp.)
- Willow (Salix spp.)
Avoid planting shrubs such as nandina, which looks pretty, but which has berries that can be dangerous to certain birds such as the cedar waxwing.
Annual and Perennial Flowers to Attract Birds to Your Yard
Many birds enjoy eating seeds from annual and perennial flowers. Some flowers provide nectar to birds such as hummingbirds who feed using their long, thin beaks. Such birds sip nectar from tube-shaped flowers and rely upon nectar for their energy. Others such as goldfinches enjoy nibbling seeds from the seed pods of such flowers as Echinacea.
For your backyard bird sanctuary, choose from among the many annual and perennial flowers and ornamental grasses. These are surefire plants to attract birds to your yard.
Annual Flowers
- Amaranthus (Amaranthus spp.)
- Bachelor Button (Centauria cyanus)
- Calendula (Calendula officinalis)
- Coreopsis (Coreopsis spp.)
- Cosmos (Cosmos spp.)
- Gloriosa daisy (Rudbeckia hirta)
- Love in a Mist (Nigella damascena)
- Marigolds (Tagetes spp.)
- Pinks (Dianthus spp.)
- Portulaca (Portulaca spp.)
- Sunflowers (Helianthus spp.)
- Zinnias (Zinnia spp.)
Perennial Flowers to Attract Birds
- Aster (Aster spp.)
- Black Eyed Susan (Rudbeckia spp.)
- Butterfly Flower (Asclepias tuberosa)
- Chrysanthemums (Chrysanthemum spp.)
- Columbine (Aquilegia spp.)
- Coreopsis, perennial types (Coreopsis spp.)
- Purple coneflower (Echinacea purpurea)
- Perennial grasses (Various species, as there are numerous types of perennial grasses)
Water and Shelter
Water Features: Bird Bath or Pond
To finish your backyard bird sanctuary an d attract wild birds to the garden, add a small water feature. A concrete bird bath, a shallow pool of water, or for the more adventurous, a pond, offers birds fresh water for bathing and drinking.
If you live near a water reclamation area or sump, they’ll enjoy it as if it were a lake, and use it as their water source. If you have a park within a few miles, they’ll take advantage of the mature trees in the park for nesting sites and visit your feeder for seed.
Bird Houses
A birdhouse isn’t necessary but adds to the enjoyments of backyard bird watching. A bluebird house in rural areas placed on a south-facing fence post, especially in a field or in an area near a field where the bluebirds can feed on insects, offers an attractive nesting site to this endangered species.
No matter how big or small your garden, you can create a backyard bird sanctuary by adding a mixture of native plants including trees, shrubs and flowers, a bird feeder and a small water feature. Be sure to add this last item, however: a comfortable chair for bird watching. For just as surely as the birds love your backyard bird sanctuary, you’ll love resting in your beautiful garden and watching their playful antics.
My Garden: It’s for the Birds!
I live in a beautiful rural area with plenty of native trees and shrubs to support wildlife. However, we did add many features to attract birds. These features include a small pond, bird baths, blue bird houses, and plenty of native annuals and perennials.
Here are some photos of my garden showing these features.
My Book
My book, Attract Birds to the Garden, is just .99 cents on Smashwords as an ebook, available in your choice of formats. It is also available as an ebook from Barnes and Noble, Amazon and other online stores, and in paperback format from Amazon. It will tell you how to cultivate a garden that becomes a backyard bird sanctuary, how to choose seeds to feed birds and more. Purchase a copy from your favorite book seller or wherever fine books are sold.
Anita Mas
That would be fun to have a place where birds will come in our yard. They can be so much fun to watch. I’ll have to put a bird feeder out there and plant flowers that naturally have seeds for birds to eat. I love the look of sunflowers anyway and they will definitely produce seeds.
Jamie
Great ideas!! I love my backyard when the birds are having fun. We have a lot of our Spring visitors returning, and I can’t wait until the hummingbirds come back! 🙂 #HomeMattersParty
Kim
Thank you for all of the great info! We have been trying to get birds to inhabit our bird house with no luck the last couple of years. I am going to pin this and try some of your suggestions!! #HomeMattersParty
Sahana
Sounds interesting, Jeanne. We don’t have a garden like you said, but the birds seems to feel very comfortable outside our air conditioner ;)They have built a nest there. They give me company for whole day when my husband goes to work.
Michelle James
I love to sit on my back deck and look for different bird types! I find it so peaceful. I love to have feeders all over to enjoy from my kitchen window too. Just snapped a pic of a beautiful Cardinal on a snow covered tree! Thanks for sharing at #HomeMattersParty
Crystal
My daughter would love if more birds came into our yard! Our problem is we have only one tiny tree, no shrubs. We do have a bird feeder though and seed, I need to put that out there. #HomeMattersParty
Lorelai @ Life With Lorelai
We love to watch and listen to the birds in our yard, it is so peaceful. You always have such wonderful ideas for the garden. Thanks for co-hosting at the #HomeMattersParty
~Lorelai
Life With Lorelai