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How to Feed Birds Without Attracting Rats

How to Feed Birds Without Attracting Rats

Rats can be attracted to the food you leave out for garden birds. 

Guard against this problem by:

  • stopping bird food spilling on the ground.
  • cleaning up spilt bird food before nightfall.
  • Using a rat-proof pole bird feeder.
  • Using a rat-proof baffle.
  • Storing bird food in secure metal bins.

By following these simple steps, you can safely feed garden birds without attracting rats.


There’s no denying that if you feed birds in your garden, you run the risk of attracting rats. But there are plenty of simple strategies you can put in place to keep the birds happy and keep the rats away.

In this article, we are going to show you how.

How to Feed Birds Without Attracting Rats.

Do Rats Even Like Bird Food?

Sadly the answer to this is a big “Yes!”

Rats will eat almost anything. But the seeds nuts and grubs birds enjoy are ratty favourites.

There is a myth that if you mix chilli powder or flakes with your birdseed, the birds will still eat it, but rats and squirrels will be put off.  

We haven’t tried this with rats, but we did try it when we had a squirrel problem. The birds and the squirrels both loved the spicy seed mix!

It looks like there are no bird foods that you can choose that would not also make a tasty meal for a rat.

Rat Proof Your Garden?

Some people suggest that you can solve the problem by making your garden “rat proof”. 

This would involve doing things like blocking up all the holes in your fences, blocking up the space under the shed, clearing undergrowth and wild patches, and even putting poison down.

But rats are part of our native wildlife. So making your garden unattractive to rats is also going to make it unattractive to other wildlife like hedgehogs, frogs, bees and butterflies.

If you’re keen on birds, we’re guessing you like to see other wildlife in the garden too, so maybe this isn’t the way forward?

Rats are Clever and Lazy

Just like humans, rats are very smart and very lazy. They will take the easiest food on offer.

Although they certainly can climb, a rat is unlikely to waste her energy climbing up to your bird feeder if there is food on the ground. 

So it’s not the feeders themselves which attract the rats in the first place.

It’s the food on the ground.

Dealing With Bird Food on the Ground

Bird food will get onto the ground either through spillage or because you have put it there. Let’s look at spillage first.

Stopping Bird Food Spillage.

There are several things you can do to stop food spilling from your feeders.

  1. Choose the right feeder.  If you are feeding small seeds such as Niger (loved by finches), choose a feeder with small holes or a seed catcher tray like this. 
  2. Avoid Seeds with husks.  Seeds like sunflower have hard husks which garden birds will discard, before eating the heart of the seed. The husks will end up on the floor, and unlike the birds, rats will eat them.
  3. Choose high-quality bird food. Cheaper mixes may be bulked out with husks and all sorts of other rubbish that birds won’t eat. This ends up on the floor as rat food. Choose a high-quality bird food to minimise waste.  
  4. Fill your feeders at the food bin. It’s easy to spill bird food when you are filling your feeders. To stop this becoming a problem, unhook the feeder, take it to your food bin and fill it there. This way any spillage falls straight back into the bin and not onto the floor.
  5. Make a seed catcher. If you already have bird feeders without seed catcher trays, there’s no need to go out and buy a whole new set. You can make your own for just a few pennies. Here’s how.

How to Make a Seed Catcher

What you’ll Need

  • Plastic picnic plate, or tub lid.
  • Marker Pen
  • Ruler or something to draw a straight line with.
  • Garden twine.
  • Sharp knife or screwdriver.
  • Hanging Bird Feeder.

Method.

  1. Choose a plastic tray that is wider than the outer edge of the perches on your bird feeder. I’ve chosen a sweet tub lid, but a picnic plate or the lid from a tub of fat balls would work well.
  2. You’ll notice the centre of the tray is marked with a little dimple. Use this as a guide to draw a line straight through the centre, edge to edge.
  3. Draw another line crossing the first.
  4. Place the bird feeder in the centre of the tray.
  5. Make marks on your lines at the edges of the feeder. This is where you will be making holes.
  6. Make 4 holes where you have marked your lines. They will be at the edges of the bird feeder when finished. I do this by heating a Phillips screwdriver over a gas ring. This melts the plastic to make good clean holes with no effort.  
  7. Thread the string through the holes to make 2 loops that will fit over the perches on the bird feeder.
  8. Turn the bird feeder upside down. Place the tray on it and fit the string over the perches.
  9. Pull the loops tight and tie the string under the tray.

And you’re done. 

The seed tray will catch most of the seed that falls from your feeder. It’s stable enough to support a small bird, but not a rat or squirrel, and it can be easily cleaned.

Bird Food on the Ground.

However careful you are about spillage, if you feed birds in the garden, you will always get some food on the ground.

You may even have put food on the ground deliberately to cater for ground-feeding birds like sparrows, wagtails and doves. 

Whether your food has spilled onto the ground, or whether you’ve put it there on purpose, there are plenty of things you can do to stop it becoming a rat-magnet.

Feed Birds at the Right Time

Birds like to feed in the day, and rats prefer to feed at night. So one easy way to avoid rats getting at your birdseed is to feed the birds in the morning.

If you put food out in the morning and put out just enough for your garden population chances are there will be nothing left by the evening to attract your local rats.

Clean Up!

If this doesn’t work, you are going to have to clean up.

It’s almost impossible to clean spilt bird food from the grass. So if you need to tidy away uneaten bird food in the evening site your feeders over a hard surface, like concrete or paving slabs. 

Or you can place some plastic sheeting below your bird feeders and simply pick this up and tip any spilt seed into the bin each evening.

Rat Proofing Your Bird Feeders.

Rats would much rather take the easy route and feed off the ground if they can. But if the easy option isn’t available, they may have a go at your bird feeders.

If this is happening, you are probably going to have to abandon tree hanging bird feeders and look at other options.

Get a pole-mounted feeding station like this one.

Place this station away from trees and anything else that the rat might be able to climb up.

The pole itself is smooth, so it will be difficult for a rat to climb up. But for extra security, you could add a baffle like this one. 

A baffle is a domed or tubular device that goes around the pole of a feeding station, below the feeders. It forms a barrier which stops rats and squirrels climbing up.

You can easily make your own tube baffle, which could be useful on a bird table. This video shows you how.

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Another option could look at is a window-mounted feeder like this. Windows are slippery and difficult for rats to climb up. And while these feeders are strong enough to support garden birds, there’s no way they will hold up a rat. 

Rat-Proof Bird Seed Storage

If you store your bird food outside in a shed or garage you need strong, well-sealed storage containers to keep it in. Metal is best. Lids should have a catch of fastening. A rat will push off a lid that isn’t secured.

Don’t make the mistake of leaving new sacks of food lying around, get fresh supplies straight into your food bins.  Rats

Conclusion: Keeping Birds Well Fed and Rats Away

Watching birds feeding in your garden is a great pleasure, but spotting a rat lunching on your lawn isn’t such a welcome sight.

Bird food does have the potential to attract rats. Follow the simple steps outlined in this article, and you can continue to support your garden birds without attracting unwanted attention from local rats.

Do you have feedback or a question for us? We’d love to hear from you, leave us a comment below.

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Clare Stone

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