Long Tailed Tits

I have been an avid bird watcher for many years. I have a large garden and recently my husband made me a new bird table which is situated at the top of my garden so I can watch the birds come to feed. About a month ago 2 long tailed tits visited the table. I always thought long tails came in flocks so I was very surprised when this pair came time & time again so to encourage them to stay I bought a variety of foodstuff to keep them here. To my amazement they were more interested in the mashed potato I put out daily for the blackbirds!! My long tails are now here all the time feasting on fresh mashed potato. I have also had the pleasure of a pair of bullfinches this year happily bathing in my waterfall. I am truly a well satisfied couch potato now. I have now bought a remote sensor garden cam/video and hope to port the pictures for you to see.

Kathy

  • for that you will get a grotty photo of my garden, thro' window,  today.  No you won't, don't know how to do it!!   Must do better, that's what they told me at school 60 years ago.

    Lot to learn

  • gaynorsl said:

    ...........................  Must do better, that's what they told me at school 60 years ago.

    Sounds like you were in the same grade as me at school. You'll fit in well here. Er . .  I mean lots of us grey birders on here not that everyone is as thick as me.

    My gallery here

    Checkout the forums' Community HOMEPAGE for lots of interesting posts from other members.

  • These 2 are always at my suet block.  In the summer I had a whole family of them, the babies must go off by the winter.

     

  • I have been looking for a way to attract LTTs, we had a family visit us a couple of years back but they haven't returned, I'll have to try the mash & bread options, does anyone have any other sure fire 'menus' ;-)

  • I've got a caged feeder which holds live mealworms, sunflower hearts and the LTTs favourite -  Fairy Cakes (Tesco Value) - 60p for 12!!   There's a suet cake holder and suet pellet feeder outside of the cage but honestly, the LTTs don't seem to be interested in anything else but the fairy cakes.   I get them in the garden every day apart from the breeding months when they're occasional visitors.

    Baby Blue and Great Tits also sit munching the cake and although it probably isn't the most nutritious food in the world, I feel it gets them by the initial period that they're independent from mum and dad.

  • Blimey reading these old posts brings back memories!!!  

    As for the LTT's. still think they prefer the fat balls or even sunflower hearts in this garden.   Mustn't forget the pastry.

    Lot to learn

  • Mash potato warning: Potatoes do absorb a lot of salt - in fact if extra salt accidentally falls into food the sure trick to eliminate it is to add a potato. I will try the potato trick too but I think I will boil a couple of potatoes separately for them.

    My Gallery

    "Any glimpse into the life of an animal quickens our own and makes it so much the larger and better in every way." John Muir

  • Unknown said:

    I have been looking for a way to attract LTTs, we had a family visit us a couple of years back but they haven't returned, I'll have to try the mash & bread options, does anyone have any other sure fire 'menus' ;-)

       hi Bernie,    I would make some raw pastry:    (supermarket brand products are cheap and perfectly fine to use)      500gms plain flour (or brown/wholemeal flour),   add 250 gms lard,   add handful of grated mild cheddar cheese  (I buy Aldi cheapest 800gm large block for around £3.50 which will do lots of times)    mix it with sufficient water to bind the pastry together but so that it is not sticky.      You can then place bits of the raw pastry on to twigs or put a chunk of it in a fatball or suet feeder.     The Long Tailed Tits will love you for it as they adore pastry especially if it contains cheese  !!!   Good luck.   

    _____________________________________

    Regards, Hazel 

  • Tried and tested and works a treat! Btw Hazel, last time I added a couple of eggs in the mix - then I hung out one feeder with the egg pastry and one without it. Guess which one went first ... WWII!!!

    My Gallery

    "Any glimpse into the life of an animal quickens our own and makes it so much the larger and better in every way." John Muir

  • Instead of flour, I've tried using the 'dust' from a sack of mealworm suet pellets. I get through a sack every 6 weeks or so, which gives quite a lot of bits to use up. Seems to work!