Our state has experienced what I
believe to be some of the coldest temperatures and received more snow/ice so far
this winter than any other that I can remember. It has been kind of rough. Sure…not nearly as bad as folks who live
farther north, but in our defense—we’re not equipped for large amounts of
snowfall and constant below zero (or very close thereto) temps in my area.
This means that my little family is
still holed up in the house and my children are eager to be actively doing something
different. I’ve been searching for
simple projects we can do, to help break up the monotony, and Monday ended up
being a good day for us to accomplish this.
I decided on one that is very appropriate for the winter—Toilet Paper
Roll Wild Bird Treat. Not only does this
repurpose empty toilet paper rolls, which I think is awesome, but also it helps
wild birds survive the tough winter. It
is often hard for them to find consistent food sources in the winter,
especially when it may be covered in snow and ice. Personally, I enjoy feeding birds year-around
and have a handful of feeders outside with a variety of different seeds…and I’ll
be showing you another project for wild birds soon.
This is what you’ll need for your
own project:
Wild birdseed (I chose one with a variety of seeds—sunflower,
millet, etc.).
Cheerios…not a necessity, but my daughter had
a cup of Cheerios when we were doing this project, and it seemed like a good
thing to throw in.
Peanut butter
Empty Toilet Paper Rolls
You’ll
also need extras like a knife, a plate for rolling your TP rolls in, and a pan
or some type of container to place your finished product.
Once
you’re ready to begin, carefully place seed on your rolling surface. The old 13x9 pan I used for this project
happened to have a lid so it worked great for rolling our TP rolls in. Throw in some Cheerios if you like.
With
your knife spread a GOOD layer of peanut butter on the toilet paper roll. This is NOT enough:
The amount of peanut butter I put on the roll apparently was not enough. It’s the one on
the right, not that you probably needed me to tell you:
Not
really impressive. You’ll see attempt #2
(on the left) looked a lot better.
Another tip for you: I didn’t get good coverage with the seed when
I just rolled the TP roll in the seed.
Instead, we placed the roll down in the seed, and used our hands to pour
seed over the top like this:
Then gently use your hands to press
it in to the peanut butter. Turn the
roll, letting the excess fall off as you continue to cover and press all the
way around.
We ended up with seven rolls, and
doing those with the “help” of a 4-year-old and 2-year-old took quite a while,
but not a great deal of time. It was
actually a good distraction for us and they LOVED getting their hands in the
birdseed. Speaking of, if you’re doing
this with littles as young as mine, just be prepared for birdseed
EVERYWHERE. Although it was in good keeping
with all the crumbs I had on my floor from breakfast, and my daughter's Cheerio break while we were working on this, but a quick sweep took
care of it.
Once you’ve completed your rolls you
can either put the rolls directly on your tree branches, or you could slip some
string, ribbon, etc. through the rolls, tie it, and then hang on a branch. For now I'm just planning to slip ours on branches.
I
wanted to show photos of them hanging outside, but our day filled up and we
didn’t get them out the same day. Planned
to do it Tuesday, but we received an ice storm, so I guess it’s
a good thing I was delayed or all of our work may have quickly ended up on the ground. They are
waiting for the bird once it is not raining ice and we look forward to watching
the birds enjoy them.
This
was also a great opportunity for a homeschool lesson about winter, and
birds. We talked about the types of
birds in our area, which would most likely visit our toilet paper roll treats, and
looked at pictures of those birds. Hope
that you enjoy this project as much as we did!
Would love to hear what types of birds visit your toilet paper roll
treats!
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