Wild Things!

Discover a Refuge in Your Own Backyard!

If you’re looking for a place to spend that time off work… how about looking right in your own backyard? With the help of Wild Birds Unlimited and just a few accents and nature-enticing additions, your backyard has the potential to be a place of relaxation and excitement.

Our wide variety of seasonally-appropriate bird food and feeders, wind chimes, bird baths, garden accents and more – everything you need to make the most of your backyard.



 
 
 
 
Be sure to ask about our Corinthian Bells windchimes, hand-crafted and hand-tuned in the USA!

 
 
 
Want to save on every purchase of bird food? Click here to learn how to save 15%!
 

 
 
 

BIRD OF THE MONTH

Oriole
• Orioles are insect and fruit eaters. They usually stay hidden in the trees eating and singing their beautiful whistling notes. They can be drawn down from their perches with foods like orange slices, grape jelly, mealworms and nectar feeders.
• When not feeding on nectar, orioles seek out caterpillars, fruits, insects, and spiders.
• Unlike many insect eating birds, Baltimore Orioles will eat spiny or hairy caterpillars, including such pest species as fall webworms, tent caterpillars, and gypsy moths.
• Bullock’s Orioles may feed almost entirely on grasshoppers when they are plentiful, one bird was found to have feasted on 45 of them in one day.
• While in their tropical winter habitats, Baltimore and Bullock’s Orioles feed on nectar from numerous flowering trees, which explains their attraction to nectar feeders upon their spring-time return to North America.
• While in their tropical winter habitat, the Baltimore and Bullock’s Oriole play an important role in pollinating several tree species as they transfer pollen from tree to tree while eating nectar from their flowers.
• Most male Baltimore Oriole songs vary enough from one another as to be unique to each individual. It is believed females can identify and locate their mate by its distinct song. 
• The Oriole nest is an engineering masterpiece. They weave a hanging-basket nest with plant fibers, grasses, vine and tree bark and sometimes string or yarn placed out on the small twigs of a branch 6-45 feet in the air. This keeps them safe from most predators.
• It takes as many as 12 days for an Oriole to weave its nest. One Baltimore Oriole was observed spending 40 hours building a nest with about 10,000 stitches and the tying of thousands of knots, all with its beak.
• The female Baltimore Oriole builds her nest with little or no help from its mate. Only the female incubates and broods, both feed the young.
• The female Bullock’s Oriole is the primary nest weaver, but she may get some help from her mate in both the weaving and collection of nest material. Only the female incubates and broods, both feed the young.
• While modern day Oriole nests are made primarily of plant fibers, Oriole nests collected in the late 1800s, before the age of the automobile, were made almost exclusively of horsehair.
• Orioles will lay 4-5 eggs anywhere from April to June. The young will fledge as late as 30 days from egg laying.
• Orioles are found across North America in the summer. Some species winter in the tropics and others in Mexico.
• Most Baltimore Orioles spend their winters in southern Mexico, Central America and the tropics, but some will stay in the southern states of the U.S., with a few reports as far north as New England.
• Most Bullock’s Orioles spend their winters in central and southern Mexico, with a few staying along the coast of southern California.
• Both the Bullock’s and Baltimore Orioles start their southerly migration as early as July, with August being the prime migration month.
• Bullock’s and Baltimore Orioles migrate at night and are known to be victims of collisions with buildings and communication towers.
• The Baltimore Oriole was named in the early 1600s for George Calvert, Baron of Baltimore, whose livery stable was painted bright yellow and black.
• The Oriole is the state bird of Maryland.
• The Bullock’s Oriole was named in honor of William Bullock and his son, also named William, for their ornithological work in Mexico in the early 1800s.
• The Baltimore Oriole is a common inhabitant of suburban landscapes due to is preference for open settings that are bordered with mature trees.
• The Baltimore Oriole, found in the east, and the western Bullock’s Oriole were once considered to be the same species under the name Northern Oriole. While they do inter-breed in areas where their ranges overlap, genetic studies have shown them to be two distinct species.
• Oriole’s are a member of Icteridae family, meaning that their closest bird relatives include meadowlarks, blackbirds, bobolinks and grackles.
• The oriole gets its name from the Latin aureolus, which means golden.
• In areas with high quality habitat, Orchard Orioles may nest in close proximity to each other; a single tree may even contain several nests.
• The Scott's Oriole, a summer resident of the Southwest U.S., weaves its nest out of fibers from yucca plant leaves.
• Orioles appear to be sensitive to the spraying of pesticides, with birds succumbing directly from the poison and from the loss of their insect food sources.
• The oldest banded Baltimore Oriole recaptured in the wild had lived 11 years and 7 months.
• The oldest banded Orchard Oriole ever recaptured in the wild had lived 9 years and 3 months.
• The oldest banded Bullock’s Oriole ever recaptured in the wild had lived 6 years and 1 month.

Click here for our selection of Hummingbird and Oriole Feeders!
 
 
Nature Happenings!

• June 12: New Moon, June 26: Full Moon

• June 14 - 16: Lyrids meteor shower

• June 21: Summer solstice - the sun is at its highest point in the sky. It's the longest day of the year and the first day of summer.

• June 26: National Wildlife Federation's The GREAT AMERICAN BACKYARD CAMPOUT™

• June is Perennial Garden Month & National Rivers Month

• Hummingbirds are attracted to the orange flowers of Trumpet Creeper vines when they bloom.

• Look for Teasel and Field Thistle blooming in open areas.

• Bird migration is finished. Birds that are here now are summer residents that nest.

• As the month progresses, feeders can become busy with visiting parents and fledglings.

• House Wrens are nesting in the northern part of region.

• Eastern species (Cerulean Warbler; Scarlet Tanager) are breeding at their western limit in the Ouchita Mountains of eastern Oklahoma.

• Snapping Turtles emerge onto land to lay eggs.

• Young raccoons emerge and venture out with their mothers.

• Bullfrogs begin calling.