Fruits Berry Wild Backyard Bird Food Mix
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Offering a fruit food appeals to those birds who eat primarily or only fruits and berries. Some species such as robins, waxwings, bluebirds, and mockingbirds do not visit bird feeding stations often but may stop to enjoy a fruit treat.
Offering a fruit source of food in your sanctuary appeals to those birds who eat primarily or only fruits and berries. Some species of birds will do visit bird feeding stations for seeds at all, but will stop by to enjoy a fruit treat. You may be able to attract them to visit by including a fruit or berry food just for them. A few wild birds which may be attracted to fruit:
- acorn woodpeckers
- American robins
- black headed grosbeaks
- blackbirds
- blue jay
- bluebirds
- brown thrasher
- cactus wren
- Carolina thrasher
- Carolina wren
- cedar waxwing
- chickadees
- curve billed thrasher
- dark eyed junco
- doves
- downy woodpeckers
- evening grosbeaks
- flickers
- fox sparrows
- gray catbird
- gray jay
- hairy woodpecker
- hermit thrushes
- hooded oriole
- house finch
- house sparrows
- indigo bunting
- kingbird
- Lewis woodpeckers
- magpies
- mockingbirds
- northern cardinals
- northern mockingbirds
- northern orioles
- orange crowned warbler
- orchard orioles
- pine grosbeaks
- purple finch
- red breasted nuthatch
- red headed woodpeckers
- rose breasted grosbeaks
- ruffed grouse
- scott’s oriole
- song sparrows
- stellar jays
- summer tanager
- Swainson’s thrush
- Tennessee warbler
- towhees
- Townsend's solitares
- tufted titmice
- warblers
- western tanager
- white breasted nuthatch
- white crowned sparrows
- white throated sparrows
- wood thrushes
- yellow billed cuckoos
- yellow breasted chat