Shafer Seed 84079 Safflower Seed Wild Bird Food, 50-Pound

Shafer Seed’s 50 LB Safflower is perfect alternative to feed your favorite wild birds. Safflower seed is loved by colorful songbirds such as Cardinals, Chickadees, Titmice and Grossbeaks. Use straight Safflower or mix with other seeds to experience a wider variety of birds to your feeders. Enjoy your “feathered friends” with Shafer Safflower Seeds.

Product Features

  • Cardinals love safflower seed
  • Perfect to diverisfy seed offerings
  • 100% Natural Seed grown in the USA
  • Can be mixed with other seeds for custom formulas
  • Not for Human consumption

3 thoughts on “Shafer Seed 84079 Safflower Seed Wild Bird Food, 50-Pound”

  1. Shipped in mesh type bag, no box, not good! The seed is still good quality, however this time it arrived in a mesh nylon type bag, no box and there was a rip in the top of the bag. Not really thrilled about this as dirt and other debris can get in with the seeds. I hope Shafer reads this review and goes back to the heavy duty bag and boxes it before shipping. When I received the mesh bag, I emptied it into the empty heavy duty bag the seeds were shipped in previously.I have attached two pics, front and back. 

  2. Most Birds Seem To Love It — especially the Cardinals! This is the second winter that we’ve used this bird seed and I think that all of the birds in the neighborhood have found our feeder! We are not really “birders” — at least not particularly knowledgeable about the various species, but we do enjoy seeing them feed at our feeder during the cold winter months. At one time during a snowy month last winter we spotted 13 bright red Cardinals waiting their turns at the feeder. What a delight! (And what a photograph I was able to get!)…

  3. Out, out, damned squirrels … ! I switched our backyard seed feeders to Safflower several years ago in order to cut down on some of the unwanted four-legged diners. We haven’t looked back. Most of our medium-sized and small birds love it, as do the entertaining chipmunks who feed on what falls—or is thrown by those hilarious House Finches—to the ground. 

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