A Friendly Robin - Credit: Peter Trimming
This week the Met Office has issued three yellow weather warnings, with snow and ice expected across many parts of the UK and below-freezing temperatures set to hit. Some places are even predicted to receive up to 5cm of snow.
A robin can use up to 10% of its body weight to keep warm on a single winter night, so unless it can replenish its reserves every day, a cold spell can prove fatal.
This is particularly hard for them because daylight foraging is reduced to just 8 hours or less, compared to over 16 hours during the summer. British Trust for Ornithology (BTO) research has shown that small birds must spend over 85% of daylight hours just foraging for food to be able to consume enough calories to survive the long night.
Without supplementary bird feeding in gardens, up to half of our robins could die of cold and starvation. Robins are particularly susceptible as they remain faithful to their gardens no matter what the weather.
Sean McMenemy, garden wildlife expert and director of Ark Wildlife, has provided some tips on how the public can help robins in their gardens this Christmas with some simple tips.
How to make your winter garden robin-friendly:
1. Food
Robins prefer to forage and feed off the ground. To encourage them to spend more time with you and make your garden a home, place a small tray full of their favourite food close to a shrub tree or preferred perch. If you’re lucky, robins can quickly become confident in our presence and feeding from the hand is not unknown!
2. Shelter
During icy spells, birds cluster together to share their warmth. They often use nest boxes as winter shelters, so putting up robin nest boxes can make a huge difference. These will be used as night roosting sites and places for nesting in the spring. Place nest boxes at least 2m from dense vegetation in order to prevent attacks from predators.
3. Water
Place plenty of water sources in the garden. Bird tables make a big difference to the survival rate of robins in urban and suburban areas. Prevent water from freezing by placing a ping pong ball in a bird bath. Alternatively, ice free for bird baths slows the freezing process down to -4°C keeping water liquid for longer.
4. Rewilding
It’s worth ensuring that your garden isn’t too pristine or tidy. Some wild undergrowth will encourage the proliferation of insects and help robins, and other birds, find food this winter.
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