Wild Bird Feed

Bug & Berry Coconut - Limited Edition

$13.99

( / )
Unavailable

Please select all options.

Please notify me when this product is available:

Let’s not beat around the bush – because the birds certainly won’t after they spot these Bug & Berry Coconuts. We’ve supercharged our berry energy recipe with real, locally grown berries and a crunchy mix of dried critters, and it’s a hit!

  • Made and hand-filled in Oamaru, New Zealand
  • Likely to attract tauhou (waxeyes), sparrows, thrushes, blackbirds and yellowhammers
  • Simple to use; hang it high and watch them fly in
  • Reusable. Once it’s been feasted on you can refill it with more energy food, seed, fruit or even see if it’s used as a nesting spot.

Ingredients: Vegetable fat, wheat flour, peanut flour, berry flavouring, mealworms, grasshoppers, crickets - Allergen Information: contains peanuts.

Feeding guide: Place in an appropriate feeder or on a feeding table. Always ensure fresh water is available. Not suitable for human consumption. Keep packaging away from small children. A complementary feed for wild birds such as waxeyes, sparrows and blackbirds. Store in a dark, dry place.


 FAQs

Where can commercially compostable packaging be processed in New Zealand?

A number of facilities around New Zealand accept commercially compostable packaging, and the list is growing.

  • Christchurch City Council Organics Processing Plant – Operated by Living Earth
  • Capital Compost – Wellington Southern Landfill
  • Revital - Central North Island including Waikato, Bay of Plenty and Taranaki
  • Palmerston North City Council (Awapuni Resource Recovery Park)
  • Hampton Organics – Hampton PARRC - Waikato
  • Envirofert Limited - Auckland & Waikato

An alternative is to find someone locally who makes “hot compost”. In this method of composting, the temperature of the heap rises to 55°C, just like a commercial facility. Our packaging will break down in a well-managed hot compost heap.

Does Energy Food melt in the sun?

No, despite the vegetable fat content, our Wild Bird Energy Food recipe is designed to withstand New Zealand’s harsh sunlight while remaining soft enough for birds’ beaks. For bird-comfort though, they are best hung in a shady spot under a high branch or suspended from a Peka Peka Feeder, where they are sure to last a long summer’s day (if they don’t get eaten first).

How do I compost Topflite’s compostable packaging?

Snip the packaging into thin pieces before adding to your compost pile. This exposes more of the surface area to those hard-working microorganisms and helps it break down faster.

Which birds eat Energy Food?

The number one fan tends to be the tauhou. Those little green cuties just love pecking away at this energy rich food. Topflite Energy Food can also attract sparrows, thrushes, blackbirds and yellowhammers.

News

Seasonal Bounty: Asparagus

Seasonal Bounty: Asparagus

Delicious simply pan fried in butter or olive oil, the elegant asparagus also features as the star of many springtime recipes. Here are five of our latest favourites.

Continue reading

Seed bombs: Weapons of mass germination

Seed bombs: Weapons of mass germination

Here’s how to create seed bombs for some explosions of colour in your own patch, or for a touch of guerilla gardening this spring.

Continue reading

How to create a springtime feast for birds

How to create a springtime feast for birds

Spring means a rise in flapping, hopping, tweeting, chirping, diving and even fighting as the local birds look for mates, build nests and forage for the food that was so scarce over the winter.

Continue reading