Wild Things!

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.

 
Want to save on every purchase of bird food? Click here to learn how to save 15%!
 
 
WBU Weather Guard
Add WBU Weather Guards to our seed, finch and peanut feeders to protect the food and birds from inclement weather. They include a lifetime guarantee and are easy to install. Also, check out our new decorative weather guard.

WBU Weather Guard from $18.99
A Feeder for a Variety of Foods
Fill this versatile feeder with one of our specialty seed blends, a seed cylinder or mealworms and see how many birds you can attract. The Dinner Bell's dome will protect your food from the elements.

Dinner Bell Feeder $34.99
WBU Fundamentals Tail Prop Suet Feeder
Our Fundamentals Tail Prop Suet Feeder lets birds eat in a natural way. The wooden paddle simulates a tree trunk and offers birds a place to prop their tail while they feed. Our bird feeder is easy to fill and hangs anywhere, and it's attractive to woodpeckers, nuthatches and other clinging birds. (Bird food not included.)

Suet Feeder $14.99
 

HOW TO FEED SUMMER BIRDS
There are numerous reasons to feed your birds during the summer. A growing cast of new and different birds are visiting feeders, all birds are sporting their most vibrant plumage and the young birds are learning where and how to feed.

Recommended Feeders
Our WBU Classic Too hopper feeder will keep your birds and food dry in summer rains. This feeder accommodates a wide variety of birds, and its curved ends let you view visiting birds on both sides at the same time. The Classic Too is available in wooden and EcoTough™ styles.

Our Quick-Clean™ Seed Tube Feeders are also a must for any backyard bird feeding station. They are easy to fill and clean, features that will help you keep your food fresh. Add a tray for tidy dining and to increase the number of birds that can feed.

The Wild Birds Unlimited Eliminator allows you to feed the birds you want while deterring squirrels and larger birds. Its patented ventilation system keeps seed dry and fresh.

The EZ-Attach Suet Feeder, with your choice of suet, will satisfy woodpeckers, their fledglings and other clinging birds. Also, add our Raccoon Baffle to your feeding station and keep problematic raccoons and swuirrels at bay.

Recommended Foods
Use safflower seed. Though seed-eating birds like it, squirrels and blackbirds don’t care for safflower. It works great in our Quick-Clean Seed Tube Feeders. Our Wild Birds Unlimited Supreme Blend attracts a wide variety of summer birds, including young fledglings. This blend works well in our Eliminator and other feeders. For a tidy dining combination, offer our WBU No-Mess Blend in the WBU Classic Too.
 
 
 
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.