What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

A bird feeder is a gift that keeps on giving!  This is a fun, and quick activity that will hopefully bring a little life to your garden and connect you more to nature. Bird feeders always invite so many things to discuss and keep discussing as your birds come to visit.

Lets start with what you need:

Bird Feeder Supplies:

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  • Cardboard – shipping boxes or even cereal boxes
  • Scissors or exacto knife
  • Peanut Butter
  • Bird Seed
  • Ribbon or String
  • Hole punch if you have one (if not you can use scissors or a knife)
  • Spoon for Peanut Butter
  • Plate for Bird Seed
  • Plate or tray for your little one to construct on
  • Apples! For snacking with the peanut butter!

Make It:

1. CUT out a shape in your cardboard (star, heart, diamond, rectangle, circle, square) or have your kids cut out their own shape if they’re old enough.

ASK: Why did you choose that shape? what does that shape mean to you? Where else can you see that shape in nature?

2. MEASURE and cut your ribbon or string, we cut ours about 2 feet long, then looped it so it ended up hanging about 1 foot down.

3. PUNCH a hole at the top of the cardboard and tie your ribbon or sting in a loop so you can hang it.

DISCUSS: How the peanut butter acts as a glue.  What are some other materials that could act as glue?

4. SPREAD the peanut butter on both sides of the cardboard

PARENT TIP: This is a perfect time to introduce the apple slices for your kids to eat with the peanut butter, I found this to distract them nicely from eating the bird seed.

5. POUR the birdseed onto a plate and have your kids press 1 side of their peanut buttered shape onto the birdseed, turn it over and do the same to the other side. Sprinkle and press any missing spots with birdseed.

6. HANG your feeder! Particularly where there is a branch or something for the bird to stand on while they nibble on their feast.

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

7. BE PATIENT Now its waiting time.  It took our birds a day or 2 to figure out the bird feeder, but when they did it was awesome! We had birds come every morning and peck away at the seeds.  My little creatives loved running to press their noses against the glass window and watch the birds eat. I loved it too.  It was a great opportunity for us to discuss the different types of birds, and to watch how they get their food and eat it. It was also so lovely to just watch the birds and see how they move and interact with each other.

Do Tell: Leave a comment below

  • What are some other good bird feeder ‘recipes’?
  • Where did your conversations take you?

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

If you want hours of quiet entertainment, build a bird feeder, fill it with seeds, then watch the feathery fliers swarm. Hang it outside your kitchen or living room window, and enjoy your chirping friends all year long. Especially as the cold months approach, your backyard visitors will be happy to have the free buffer. It’s a great way to learn about birds too. In this video and step by step guide, we share how you can make a DIY bird feeder with your kids.

You can make a simple bird feeder by using a copper top for a cap for a 44 deck post, and the clear body is made from a plastic soda bottle. The rest of the feeder was cut from a single cedar board, and it all comes together with tools you probably have hanging around your garage.

What Type of Wood Is Used for Bird Feeders?

Cedar wood is the best type of wood to use for a bird feeder. For this project, you’ll be able to get all the materials, including cedar wood, vinyl-covered wire, a soda bottle, and copper top, from the home center and grocery store.

Illustration by Carl Wiens

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Using a combination square and a compass, lay out the feeder's six individual pieces on a 2-foot-long 1x6 cedar: three 3½-inch squares, one 4½-inch square, and two 3¼-inch-diameter circles.

  • Clamp the cedar to a worktable. Using a jigsaw, cut out the circles and squares.
  • Cut the four 4-inch-long perches from the ¼-inch dowel.
  • Using a random-orbit sander or sanding block with 120-grit paper, sand the pieces so that they are smooth and free of splinters. (Make sure the dust bag is on the back of the sander.)
Step 2

Make the Top of the Bird Feeder

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Glue two 3½-inch blocks together, and secure them with 4d nails. Then glue and nail one of the circles on top of the blocks.

Mix the epoxy, and spread it on one side of the square. Set the square into the copper post cap. Let it set for 20 minutes.

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Turn the 4½-inch square on edge, and hold it steady with a bar clamp. Drill a ¼-inch hole about ½ inch deep into the center of the square's edge. Repeat until you have a hole on each edge.

  • Glue 4-inch-long perches into the holes.
  • Glue and nail the other circle onto the square with the perches.
  • On the square side of the circle/square pair, drill a ¾-inch-deep hole into the center with a ½-inch spade bit. Exchange the spade bit for a ¼-inch bit, and drill all the way through the pair. The bigger hole will help hold the hanging wire in place.
Step 4

Wire the Base

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Cut a piece of vinyl-covered wire about 3 feet long. Feed the wire through the hole in the base.

Using a pair of pliers, fold over the wire's tip on the square side of the base to make a little knot. Pull the knotted end back into the larger hole until it stops at the circle. Make sure it's all the way in the hole and doesn't stick out of the square. Glue and nail the last 3½-inch square over the hole to cover it.

Step 5

Make a Hole for the Wire in the Top

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Put a bar clamp around the base of the post cap so that you can hold it steady. With a finish nail, make a little dent in the point of the copper peak. Then carefully drill a ¼-inch hole through the peak and out of the center of the attached circle.

Step 6

Make the Seed Holder

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Using a pair of scissors, cut the ends off a 1-liter soda bottle to make a cylinder.

Step 7

Assemble The Bird Feeder

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Brace the soda-bottle cylinder on a scrap of wood clamped to a worktable. Drill four evenly spaced ¼-inch holes 1½ inches from the cylinder's edge.

Feed the wire attached to the base through the cylinder. Fit the cylinder over the circle on the base, positioning the feeding holes above the perches. Nail the cylinder to the base with blued tacks.

Thread the wire through the top by going through the circle first, then out through the copper peak. Fit the top into the cylinder.

To hold the top on, slide a rubber grommet onto the top of the wire, and push it tight against the copper peak. This is your assembled bird feeder.

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Pull the grommet along the wire to loosen the top, pull the top out of the cylinder, then fill the cylinder with seed. Fit the top back on, pull the wire taut, and slide the rubber grommet tight against the peak again.

Step 9

Make a Hook for the Feeder

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Choose a tree to hang your feeder from and a limb that's easy to reach. The limb should be healthy and thick enough to support the weight of a full feeder—plus a couple of birds.

Twist an eye screw into the limb. Slide a screwdriver through the eye, and use it to turn the screw until it's in all the way.

What materials do you need to make a bird feeder?

Photo by Wendell T. Webber

Thread the top end of the bird feeder's wire through the eye screw on the tree. Twist the wire around itself to keep it from slipping out. Then sit back and wait for your visitors to drop in for lunch!