Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (2024)

Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (1)

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Making a bird feeder is a fun activity for gardeners of all ages. Follow our guide to create your own peanut butter bird feeder.

On this page:
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1. Benefits for you
2. What you need
3. Step by step guide

Benefits for you

  • Making a bird feeder works on our fine motor skills, including finger dexterity
  • This is a good shared activity, allowing you to connect with others and enjoying creating something
  • Feeding the birds gives them nutrition and allows you to enjoy the simple pleasure of watching wildlife in your garden

Did you know?

A study published in Nature in 2022 found encounters with bird life could create lasting improvements in mental wellbeing.

What you need

Essential items

  • Clean cardboard tube, e.g. the inside of a roll of kitchen towel
  • Peanut butter (100% natural is safest for birds)
  • Knife
  • Bird seed
  • String
  • Plate
  • Scissors

Tools to make it easier

  • Food or freezer bag clip

Top tip

If you have allergy concerns with peanut butter, you can use almond butter, cashew butter, sunflower seed butter or suet instead.

Step by step guide

Follow these steps to make your peanut butter bird feeder with ease.

Step 1: Gather what you need

Get all your equipment together and find a comfortable spot to work. If you are seated at a table, have everything within arm's reach.

Step 2: Spread the peanut butter

Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (2)

A cardboard tube spread thickly with peanut butter

This is the messy bit!

Spread the peanut butter onto the cardboard tube using a knife. If your peanut butter is thick and a little tricky to spread, you may have to get your fingers messy and use them too.

Make sure the peanut butter is spread thickly to cover the cardboard tube. Otherwise, the bird seed will not stick well.

Step 3: Cover with bird seed

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Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (3)

A tube covered in peanut butter is rolled in bird seed

Carefully scoop some bird seed onto a plate. You will be rolling the cardboard tube on it, so the plate needs to be at least as wide as the tube.

Lay the cardboard tube on the plate. Gently hold it at each end. Use your fingers to roll the tube back and forth over the bird seed. You want the peanut butter to be well covered with bird seed all over. You may need to use your hands to pick up and place seed onto the areas that don’t get covered well.

Step 4: Loop the string through the tube

Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (4)

String is pushed through the cardboard tube

Take the string and push it through one end of the cardboard tube. It needs to go all the way through and out the other side.

You will be using this string to hang the feeder, so you need enough string length either side to make a hanging loop. When you are happy with the length, carefully cut the string using scissors.

Step 5: Tie the string

Bring the two ends of the string together. Tie a knot - you will probably need to do a double knot so it is secure.

This will allow you to hang your peanut butter bird feeder horizontally.

If you wanted your feeder to hang vertically, you could create holes near the top of the tube using a pencil. You can then run the string through the holes. You could always try making both and see if your birds prefer one design over the other.

Make it easier

If you want to avoid fiddly knot tying use a food / freezer bag clip to hold the string together.

Step 6: Hang your feeder

Congratulations, you have made your peanut butter bird feeder!

Now, hang it somewhere for the birds to enjoy. A branch, fence or somewhere the birds like to spend time is ideal. In our example, we chose a hook near the hedgerow.

Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (5)

A finished peanut butter bird feeder

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Peanut butter bird feeder - Thrive (2024)
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