Friday, March 29, 2024
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Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat: Attract Birds With Homemade Treat Cakes

three black kittens
We’ll get those birds!

THIS POST IS the most popular in the Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat series, and one of the most popular on my blog. It never fails to surprise me how much we all have in common—it seems most of you feed birds at least now and then, and many all through the year with a variety of feeders and foods. I decided it was time to add a little new information about ingredients you can use and post it for a few new readers who haven’t seen it yet. All photos in this article are mine, taken in my yard through the years.

Among the requirements for my Backyard Wildlife Habitat, I provide food and shelter for native wild bird species all year round because aside from being fun to watch, they are an important insect guard in my vegetable garden.

Red-bellied woodpecker
The red-bellied woodpecker turns to look at me and my cats.

In winter, however, I am compelled to put feeders up everywhere I can hang one, and at least one seed feeder is visible from each window in the house as well as suet feeders, ear corn and water. Not only does it give the birds a safe place to eat, drink and be merry, it gives my cats something to do and it gives my eyes a break while I slave at the computer all day into the night.

Suet cakes, or something like them, are an important part of the diet for insect-eating wild birds because they provide the birds with appropriate protein. They also provide a medium for mixing in other goodies like nuts and dried fruit and flavoring it with peanut butter or fruit juice. Not only do they feed your regular visitors, but they attract other birds you may not see at your seed feeders, like the parade of woodpeckers who enjoy mine.

I like to spoil my avian visitors—and save a little money in the process, plus use materials that would otherwise be composted or discarded.

woodpecker and wren at suet cake
Bird Breakfast

Ingredients for your treat cakes

When suet cakes go on sale at my local feed supply store, I stock up. The suet cakes are a superior product for the birds because the suet is animal fat rendered to remove impurities and stays solid well into summer heat, yet doesn’t freeze solid in temperatures below freezing. Birds often need to eat one-third to one-half of their own weight each day—what was that about eating like a bird? Imagine if we tried that! The rendered suet packs a higher punch of high-quality accessible protein and calories to carry the birds through winter weather.

You can make a less-expensive substitute that includes lard, providing a high-calorie protein, and peanut butter, providing vegetable protein and high-calorie oils. I can put together a dozen or more treat cakes for about 50 cents each this way depending on the price I pay for lard and peanut butter.

In addition to the protein sources I add fruits and nuts for flavor and more protein. Fresh or dried apple peelings from pies I’ve made for the holidays minced very small, older somewhat tired oranges squeezed for their juice or just crushed and mince, other fruits that are past their prime, and the leftovers from making pies and jellies in the summer. I have several mulberry trees and collect crabapples from trees near one of my municipal gardens and I make jelly with these, as well as baking with the crabapples. As each fruit comes into season—raspberries, blackberries, peaches, plums—I bake or jelly with it, or save the less-than-perfect ones to dry for later use. I dry these peels and pickings on waxed paper in my oven, set on the lowest setting, or just using the pilot light in my gas oven. Birds LOVE these fruit treats in mid-winter.

Don’t forget you can also save the seeds from your Halloween pumpkins, and even unused flower and vegetable seeds from your garden.

And when I find peanut butter on sale and stand there trying to decide if my birds would prefer smooth or crunchy, I know I’m really in deep.

white-breasted nuthatch
White-breasted Nuthatch

Suet vs. lard

Suet is actually the hard fat found in cows and sheep, especially from around the kidneys, and for human food use as well as suet cakes for birds it’s rendered by melting, cooking and cooling until it has a consistency like butter.

I use lard, which is rendered pig fat also used in cooking for humans, most famously for pie crusts, but it’s less expensive and easier to work with than suet, so I call the bird cakes I make “treat cakes” instead of “suet cakes” because they don’t contain any suet. Birds get a good dose of protein with either one, but where lard will melt in warmer temperatures, suet will keep its shape and can be used for treat cakes all year round, so I use mine only in the winter.

In the recipe below, you can substitute suet which you would melt and cool, or rendered suet, and these could be used all year.

Recipe for homemade bird treats

  • one pound cake of lard
  • 8 oz. jar of peanut butter
  • one cup of fruit peels or other leftovers, diced
  • one cup of regular uncooked oatmeal
  • one cup of corn meal
  • one cup of bird seed, with more just in case
  • several small freeezable containers about the size of your suet feeder
  1. In a large bowl, mash the lard and peanut butter together, and one by one add the other ingredients mixing until evenly mixed. If the fruit is fresh or you are using fruit juice, the extra liquid may need to be absorbed with extra oatmeal or corn meal. Mixture should be the consistency of cookie dough.
  2. Press mixture into your containers, and place them in the freezer.
  3. When you are ready to use them, pop them out of the container and place in your suet feeder.
  4. Watch your birds have a party.
orange cat with begonias
Mr. Peach watches the birds.

Some notes and variations

I’ve described mixing the ingredients into the fat at room temperature, but you can also carefully melt the fat and even peanut butter together, then stir in the other ingredients one by one. This was how I initially made my bird treat cakes but I don’t like to work with hot fat if I can help it for safety’s sake, and I really don’t care for the smell of the lard when it’s heated up.

But if you do decide to melt your fats for these, then in step one you would use a heavy pot over a very low heat on your stove, slowly melt or even just soften the fats, remove from heat, then proceed with the rest of the recipe. In any case, be extremely careful with hot, melted lard or suet because even just a splash of hot fat can result in a dangerous burn—this taken from the days when I worked standing at a deep fryer at a various restaurants, regularly being splashed as I dumped in the french fries or breaded fish filets.

You can also make these with just lard or just peanut butter, and only bird seed or corn meal, and the birds will still love you. The grain ingredients of oatmeal and corn meal help to keep the fat pliable, and in warmer temperatures absorbs the fat if it softens, making it easier for the birds to eat. You can even use regular flour, but the corn meal or oatmeal have more nutrition.

woodpecker and wren at feeder
Ms. Wren had better watch her step

The fruits add sugar for quick energy and can be used fresh or dried, and you can even add applesauce or bits of jelly. Whole or ground nuts of any sort are also a real treat because the oil in the nuts is also protein-rich.

You can decide for yourself how much you want to spend on the materials. If you buy commercial suet cakes, save the containers and use them to make your own, covering them with plastic or foil for the freezer. Since it doesn’t freeze completely solid, you can make it in a loaf pan and score it before you put it in the freezer or slice it when it’s frozen. I also use flat 8-oz. sour cream containers and small cake and pie pans.

Buying or making a suet feeder

If you don’t have a commercial suet feeder, you can make one out of various materials. A mesh bag from onions or potatoes cut down to size will hold out for at least one winter, unless Fatso the Squirrel gets into it. You can use chicken wire or a product that used to be called “hardware cloth” a 1/4″ wire mesh product. I’ve used various kinds of wire fencing that were generously left behind by previous owners.

black cat at snowy window
Lucy Birdwatching

And your cats will have plenty of entertainment. For the birds’ sake—and your kitties’—keep them inside, and make sure this is as close to those birds as they get.

Information about feeding birds abounds on the internet. My favorite resources are: The National Audubon Society’s Audubon at Home website; Cornell University’s Project FeederWatch website, which includes not only bird feeding information but also bird identification information plus you can sign up as a citizen scientist and count the birds at your feeders to help track bird populations; and BirdWatcher’s Digest Magazine online where you can read dozens of articles about feeders and feeds and placement and personal experience. These are just the three I reference most frequently, but hundreds of others can teach you more about birds and bird feeding, as can the people you’ll met when you visit the places that sell bird seed and feeders.

sparrows at feeder
Sparrows at feeder.

After you’ve got your feeders set up, just take an afternoon to sit and observe the birds’ feeding habits. After a while it’s mesmerizing to watch them cycle around with each other. They fly in and out so frequently and hop around so much before they even get one seed that it’s hard to believe they get any nourishment at all from it!

I keep my windows clean so I can photograph the birds (as in the photos above), plus I sketch them, which is a real trick since they never stand still but I have a lot of practice in that from sketching my cats.

And read a few tips about caring for birds when the heavy snows fall in Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat: Bad Weather Birds.

. . . . . . .

 


Backyard Wildlife Habitats

CWH_Badge_Spring2011_CertifiedWildlifeGardener_220x180

My backyard wildlife habitat was certified through National Wildlife Federation’s program in 2003, and their site is still one of my favorite references for information. Visit and read about it, and begin planning your own and be certified!

. . . . . . .

Read the entire series of introductory articles:

An Introduction to Backyard Wildlife Habitats

What’s in Your Backyard? The First Step in Planning Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat

What Else is in Your Backyard: The Fauna That Fill It

Bringing it All Together: Enhancing and Developing Your Habitat

. . . . . . .

Also read about my art, photography, poetry and prose inspired by my backyard wildlife habitat:

Art Inspired by My Backyard Wildlife Habitat

Photography Inspired by My Backyard Wildlife Habitat

Poetry Inspired by My Backyard Wildlife Habitat

Prose Inspired by My Backyard Wildlife Habitat


Or just read other articles in the category of Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat

Art and Gifts featuring cats you know! Visit Portraits of Animals

AfterDinnerNap-Etsy~~~

Wildlife Artwork from Portraits of Animals!
"Safe", pastel, 15" x 20" © Bernadette E. Kazmarski
“Safe”, pastel, 15″ x 20″ © Bernadette E. Kazmarski

Though they were in plain sight of about six houses and all of us watched them, they apparently felt they were safe—and they were, really, because when I looked at the reference photo for this I wondered why I’d taken a photo of the brush at the end of the yard, and then I saw the ears. It was the perfect cover, hidden in plain sight.

Read more, and purchase.



Copyright

All images and text used on this site are copyrighted to Bernadette E. Kazmarski unless otherwise noted and may not be used without my written permission, although links to your site are more than welcome and are shared. Please ask if you are interested in using and image or story in a print or internet publication. If you are interested in purchasing a print of an image or a product including it, check my animal and nature website Portraits of Animals to see if I have it available already. If you don’t find it there, visit Ordering Custom Artwork for more information on a custom greeting card, print or other item.


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From health and welfare to rescue and adoption stories, advocacy and art, factual articles and fictional stories, "The Creative Cat" offers both visual and verbal education and entertainment about cats for people who love cats, pets and animals of all species.

5 thoughts on “Your Backyard Wildlife Habitat: Attract Birds With Homemade Treat Cakes

  • As much as I’d love to feed the birds, I am aware that two feral cats living on our back deck might just give them ideas!

    Reply
  • Hi, I can’t find a plain email address for you. I’d like to feature an excerpt from your ATRACT BIRDS WITH HOMEMADE TREAT CAKES and use a couple of pictures. If you visit my site kittyacatemyorg.wordpresws.com you will see the type of stuff I do. Theere will be a full link back to your original article. I do not ask for any link reciprocation. I also want to look over the rest of your site and possibly feature it in another seperate post.

    Reply
    • Sorry, I removed it when I was getting too much spam through it. Please do, and thanks for sharing.

      Reply
    • I thought I’d replied to you the other day, but I don’t see it here. Sure, please go ahead and choose your excerpt, and thanks for asking me.

      Reply

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