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Snob Feeding with Zick Dough

Sunday, February 13, 2022

 



Let's face it. Along with the fabulous birds we all want to see, the sapsuckers with their velvet berets, there's a lot of riffraff in the winter bird feeding world. 

One starling at the Zick Dough is unique and beautiful.


Eight starlings is expensive. Dirty, too. Then 30...ugh! Starlings can take a fine homemade food like Zick Dough and turn it into pounds of poop faster than any bird alive. 



We fill up our guts then we turn it into @#$# 
Then we get rid of it


If you go listen, and I hope you will, you will understand something of my musical roots, and my sense of humor. Best sung in a roomful of filthy hippies who gleefully shout the backup lines.

Anyway, I like to keep my homemade Zick Dough Improved away from starlings. The way to do this is to offer it in a place starlings (and house sparrows) fear to go. These imported birds know we hate them, and they won't generally enter a feeder that looks like a trap, or that brings them too close to people.

Back in Jemima Jay days, soon after her release in June 2017, I devised a little feeder she could use, that other birds hesitated to exploit.


It's under the crank-out window right by my studio drawing table. I stocked it with things like pecan halves and chicken breast and basmati rice, fresh corn, snap peas...the buffet was deluxe and she thrived on it.  It was our little secret! 


Of course, given such fabulous fare, it didn't take long for Jemima's  little feeder to catch on with the other birds. This was mostly fine with me, and it's had wonderful consequences of late.

I've simplified the offerings, keeping it to Zick Dough Improved. See bottom of post for recipe. 

The Snob Feeder was easy to make.  It's just a canning strainer with a handle, and a black alligator style clip from the hardware store. Why a strainer? Well, rain goes through it, so you don't make Zick Dough Soup every time it rains. That said, I feed small amounts frequently, and withhold the food if it's really pouring. 

 I've clipped the strainer to the shelf bracket that supports my big bird screen--a panel of black crop netting strung across a frame of PVC pipe, which prevents birds from killing themselves on my big studio window. 
For more on that, go here:

It's easy to access! I just crank out the studio window, put a handful of Zick Dough in the strainer, and go back to work. 
Now I'm going to show you who benefited from the inside knowledge of my little "Snob Feeder."

Here's the male white-breasted nuthatch who made an appearance in my last post about ice storms. If you click on the photo you can see he's missing a couple primary feathers on his right wing--pulled out by getting stuck in ice in his roost hole overnight. 
You can also see that the birds have made a hole in the screen that they duck in and out of. :)



 Here's my adorable little female red-breasted nuthatch. Squee!! They're so much smaller than the white-breasted nuthatch, and red-breasts are only here in SE Ohio in winter.


Needless to say, tufted titmice are my most enthusiastic customers, as are Carolina chickadees. They both jump for joy for Zick Dough!


Cardinals love Zick Dough too, but my window feeder pictures aren't so hot. So here's a nice old couple. Look at all the red on that female, speaking of  her advanced age and the higher testosterone levels that come with it. The higher the T, the stronger her color.




Now, white-throated sparrows aren't folks you'd normally think would clamber into a food strainer right next to a window, but...


after thinking about it and watching other birds enjoying this intriguing looking food, like this buff-striped bird is doing, I have several who have made the leap! Here's a pretty white- striped morph. Studies have shown that, while they may not be as attractive to our eye, buff-striped males make better dads. :)


Speaking of sparrows, my sweet little song sparrow Ball, hand-raised last fall and still with me, loves Zick dough! He remembers it from when he was a babe.


If you click on the photo you will see the fault bar across his tail that is his nametag.


This fox sparrow will eat the Zick Dough I sprinkle on the ground below, but he's a little too shy to come in to the feeder. Having him this close is a thrill. Pardon the photo--the bird screen was iced up. 


Same for the eastern towhees. I have SEVEN this winter! Never have had more than a couple. I love these two huge sparrow species!


This lovely male downy woodpecker likes to come and go by the hole in the netting. He's welcome.


This might be his mate. I like the way she hangs down to get her treat.


Dark-eyed juncos are another ground feeder one wouldn't expect would climb into a homemade feeder, but here's one feasting.


Carolina wrens are regular. Like any insectivore, they need nourishing food to survive such hard winters as this one.


This beautiful American tree sparrow is thinking hard about coming in for Zick dough...


but settles for the dried mealworms I toss onto the snow several times a day. The birds were a bit slow to catch onto this new treat (just like me). But it's so nice to have something nourishing to offer the birds when it stays so cold for weeks at a time. 


Towhees, juncos and tree sparrows dig them! 


Pro-tip (I'm full of them today!)  The photo below was taken at Tractor Supply. Here's the choice. You can buy 17 oz. (just a hair over ONE POUND) of dried mealworms in the wild bird feeding section for $19.99. That's about $20/lb. I don't think the birds give a hoot about the "berry flavor" they add. That's just to get YOU to buy it for $20/lb.

OR you could walk to the chicken feeding section in back, and buy FIVE POUNDS of the same thing for $39.99. That's about $7/lb.

Your choice. They keep well. I tried to buy them first from my friend Tim Vocke at thenaturesway.com but he tells me that all dried mealworms are coming out of China these days. He's my first resort for live mealworms for my rehab birds. 




I hope this photo essay has shown you that you can cultivate personal relationships with birds using the snob feeding concept. Offer fabulous high quality, high protein food in small amounts, and make them work for it. Bring them in right up close to a window where you spend most of your time. They'll learn to recognize and trust you, watch your rhythms and anticipate your moves, and you'll get an intimate look into their lives. 

This is the fourth winter this beautiful female yellow-bellied sapsucker has spent with me.


I have had the great pleasure of getting to know her, teaching her how to eat strange things, and watching her slip into full adult plumage.


She brings me joy. Long may she run.

Here's that recipe.

 ZICK DOUGH IMPROVED: SMALL BATCH 

Melt in the microwave and stir together: 
1 cup peanut butter 
1 cup lard 

In a large mixing bowl, combine 
2 cups unmedicated chick starter 
2 cups quick oats 
1 cup yellow cornmeal 
 1 cup flour

Add melted lard/peanut butter mixture slowly to the combined dry ingredients and mix well.
Stir constantly.Stop adding the melted fats when the mix is crumbly and a little dry.
                                                    If you have extra PB/lard, just save it for the next batch.
                                                        You can adjust the texture with a little  extra flour.

NOTE: This is a COLD WEATHER OFFERING ONLY.  It's too rich to feed once the weather warms up. If you do feed in spring, keep it to cold snaps. It should be regarded as a treat in warmer weather, NOT a steady diet. 


Most frequently asked questions, to save time: 

I don't want to use lard. Can I substitute vegetable shortening?
You can, but the birds won't like it. I've done the side-by-side multi-species taste tests.

Isn't white flour bad for birds?
No.

I'm going to use organic almond flour and all-natural hand-ground peanut-butter.
Knock your$elf out! I u$e $tore brand wheat flour and PB becau$e I'm feeding a LOT of bird$$$$

6 comments:

Thank you for the recipe! How often do you put this out for them? I'm currently battling the raccoons who take down my feeders and the possums who scarf up everything. And now some red tail hawks have moved onto the property, so the songbirds are skittish. We could all use a break/treat.

@Sharon, I put it out maybe four times a day in cold weather. Just make sure it's all eaten up by nightfall or you're going
to get coons and possums. Ugh!! It's highly attractive to mammals. Just had a possum cleaning up the other night.

I have a wide variety of bird species in the Byard in part because I don't discriminate and welcome all including sqrls. Although feral cats have been a cause of concern now...7 of them so far.

I Love the improved Zickedough! Have you ever added red pepper to deter squirrels ?

@Susan Pleak, no...I'm not a fan of capsicum in bird feeding. Birds may appear to be insensitive to its taste? but what about their eyes and mucous membranes? I'd rather feed the dough--and all my seed--in feeders that are pole mounted and baffled so the squirrels can't access them. The way I look at it, if squirrels can reach your feeders, you've lost the war.

I have a couple of yard Song Sparrows (Seattle) that come to the glass deck door for dried mealworms. I toss out a few at that time, but I don’t load up a feeder. It’s on-demand only at my house, and they know the drill.

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