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I am building a bird-friendly garden.

It is going to contain serviceberries, mountain ashes, hawthorns and dogwoods, as these plants are known to attract birds.

I love magnolias, however, I've read some opinions that they do not have enough value for birds, so, from my point of view, if that is the case, they will be a waste of space in my bird-friendly garden.

On the other hand, some sites claim that certain birds love magnolia fruit.

What is actually the degree of bird attraction in case of magnolias?

VividD
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1 Answers1

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I'm not an ornithologist, but I think you are over-engineering.

If you like magnolia, plant one. Various birds will use it to rest and as observation point to catch insects.

Keep the garden most diverse as possible, so you will have more birds. If you go only for the plants you cited, you will get just berry eaters. You should instead attract also insects and eventually small mammals, and more birds will pass to your garden.

In general: taller the plant, more birds you will have. Also denser plants help (also if they are small). So you will find some magnolia varieties which could help bird to have a good nest and to look around.

If you add ivy to the trunk, birds will love it, and you will have berries. (there are different opinion about magnolia thinking about thins).

Add some waters or a fountain, and the bird will get to your garden.

Giacomo Catenazzi
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