The K M Links Game - November 2024 Week...
Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by WendyS. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Hi Wendy, another problem, which we found, was the dropped seeds encourage mice, and as for the seeds germinating, there's not much you can do about it, i've put mine towards the top of the garden now, and all I do is keep the grass cut, tidy, but not what I would call a lawn, and its actually quite nice to see Dandilions, Buttercups an Daisy's growing there.
Sorry I can't give you any advice as such, but i'm sure it won't be long before someone does.
Weve got ours in an area of the garden than has membrane covered in bark chippings around it. Dropped seeds on the whole are hoovered up by ground feeding birds and anything that germinates does so on top of the membrane, so is incredibly easy to pull out.
One of our niger feeders hanging over the lawn has a "niger lump" on the ground underneath-even after the attention of the 3 goldfinches that seem to constantly feed off the ground there. Not unduly worried as it seems a relatively small price to pay for having at least 7 goldfinches in almost permanent residence.
Hi Wendy - I've a bird table on grass so that's no problem, they just get mown over.
However I put seed for the ground feeders on the path between 2 lawns because it's nice & open & they can see any cats approaching. Needless to say the sides & the cracks get lots of weeds - they escape the mower as the grass is a little higher than the path. I just wait until they're big enough to pull out....I've given up worrying about the rough bits...I'd rather see the birds!
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