How to Attract Squirrels to Your Garden
If they live in your area, attracting squirrels should not be a problem. Squirrels love to eat and putting out the right food is a surefire route to squirrels in the garden. If you have a bird feeder, you may already have done this without meaning to. Put out separate squirrel feeders, away from your bird feeders, so they and the birds can both eat in peace. Squirrels like sunflower seeds, and this is often what they’re looking for when they scatter your bird feed everywhere. Put out trays of sunflower seeds, unroasted peanuts, or field corn kernels for them to eat. If you want to see some acrobatics, you can buy special squirrel feeders that make squirrels swing and jump to get to their food. If you don’t want your squirrels to have to work, hang whole field corn cobs or pinecones covered in peanut butter so they dangle just above a branch, where they can sit and munch. Beyond feeding, you can encourage squirrels in the garden by leaving hollow trees or trees with nooks and crannies in the trunks: these are ideal nesting sites. If you don’t have or can’t keep these kinds of trees, hang nest boxes made of untreated wood or metal around your yard.
Making Responsible Wildlife Gardens for Squirrels
Squirrel friendly gardens are easy to achieve, but some steps are required to make sure you and the squirrels in the garden continue to live peacefully. The last thing you want to end up doing is attracting squirrels into your house. Prune away tree branches that would give them easy access to the roof, and seal off any possible openings in broken windows, masonry, or pipes. Squirrels are also known to strip the bark from trees. Keep them out of important trees by wrapping the trunks in sheet metal or installing squirrel baffles. Prune trees whose canopies are within jumping distance to keep the squirrels from getting in from above. Don’t forget the garden! If your squirrels are well fed, they are less likely to bother your garden.