ChatterBank1 min ago
Why Don't The Birds Like My Mealworms?
13 Answers
I've only just started to put them out and did wonder if it's because they are quite hard - they are dried ones. Should I soak them first?
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"TIP: If buying dried mealworms rather than live mealworms, soak in warm water for 20-60 minutes before putting out to provide valuable moisture content. This makes them more attractive to birds plus easier to digest - especially for younger birds"
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https:/ /shoppi ng.rspb .org.uk /mealwo rms/
"TIP: If buying dried mealworms rather than live mealworms, soak in warm water for 20-60 minutes before putting out to provide valuable moisture content. This makes them more attractive to birds plus easier to digest - especially for younger birds"
Source:
https:/
You you can but Live ones are by far the best especially during the breeding season. A hard one could choke a nestling whereas a live one wouldn't. Hopefully mum is too savvy to feed chics the hard ones though. Wigglywigglers is an excellent site to buy them and they don't smell and keep quite a while. Plenty of info their site.
The dried mealworms have also been found to be very bad for hedgehogs - I think I read that they give them some sort of bone disease. (?)
I stopped putting them down, but still use a "robin" bird food, which seems to attract all sorts of birds - I'm thrilled with the results!
This bird food contains a few mealworms, but not many.
Also put down suet block, crumbled, which goes down even better than the seed. The blackbirds and robins will appear out of nowhere and sit on my raspberry canes to attract my attention if there's no suet down!
I stopped putting them down, but still use a "robin" bird food, which seems to attract all sorts of birds - I'm thrilled with the results!
This bird food contains a few mealworms, but not many.
Also put down suet block, crumbled, which goes down even better than the seed. The blackbirds and robins will appear out of nowhere and sit on my raspberry canes to attract my attention if there's no suet down!
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