Decorate your lawn, patio or garden with this fun Mushroom Mesh bird feeder! It’s a perfect complement to any backyard decor and a great fit into a personal collection or even is an excellent gift option. NO/NO Mushroom Mesh Wild Bird Feeder is best used for attracting and feeding wild birds. Easily fill the Mushroom Mesh Bird Feeder with up to .7 lb. of black oil sunflower seed or peanuts, place in a quiet and convenient place and watch as a variety of birds flock to your feeder.
Product Features
- NO/NO = No Wood, No Plastic
- Powder coated, all metal mesh construction
- Easy twist off top to fill with black oil sunflower seed or peanuts
- Accommodates clinging birds
- 0.7 lb. seed capacity
Cute but poor design My first reaction upon unboxing was that this feeder was MUCH smaller than I thought it looked in the picture, but just as cute. Check the measurements first so you’re not surprised: it’s only about 8 or 9 inches tall. The mushroom cap is awesome since it theoretically will keep the squirrels out, but it’s so small that I’m not sure it will be effective. I have very determined squirrels around here, so I will watch them and update the review.
Very nice bird feeder. This is a very pretty bird feeder. It is made of metal which is refreshing in the age of plastic. It is a nice size and it hangs real nicely on any branch or hook. I’m using sunflower seeds in mine and when I first put them in, some of them fell out through the mesh holes. I noticed the fuller it was, the less they would fall out. So when filling it, I do recommend either filling it outside or over the sink or on top of some newspaper so one doesn’t have to search around and pick up itty…
If You Fill It They Will Come, or Cue the Garden Gnomes: a Good Supplemental Bird Feeder Because of cats and squirrels, I hang my bird feeders two stories up, away from branches suitable for mammalian leaping. And for that reason, and my abundant supply of bird seed, I have a robust population of birds visiting (and emptying) my hanging squirrel-proof bird feeder on a daily basis and my nyger-filled feeder during goldfinch season.