Found Objects Nest Wreath

Welcome in spring with your own version of a nest wreath. Just like a little bird we gathered odds and ends from around our house and yard to create ours.

NestWreath

Materials:

  • Grape vine wreath
  • Ribbon, enough to wrap your wreath
  • Small gauge wire
  • Eggs. We used large brown chicken, blue bantam chicken, and white goose eggs on ours.
  • Acrylic paint in robbin’s egg blue, white, and black
  • Assorted feathers
  • Assorted flowers
Tools:
  • Paint brush
  • Scissors

Instructions:
  1. Poke holes in the top and bottom of your egg and blow out contents (save for a scrambled egg breakfast).
  2. Using about 8” of wire, thread it through the two holes in your eggs and twist together under the eggs.
  3. Paint your eggs. We painted some of the chicken eggs teal and left the other eggs natural.
  4. Splatter paint your eggs. We used black spatters on the goose eggs and white splatters on the brown chicken eggs.
  5. Wrap wreath with ribbon.
  6. Attach eggs to wreath with free ends of wire.
  7. Tuck feathers and flowers around the wreath.

EggPainting


Why you should be a Pet Detective: reason #5

Our “Why You Should be a Pet Detective” series is a countdown of the top 5 reasons you should research the origin of your pet before you bring them home.

Don’t Support the Wild Bird Trade
Thousands of parrots are taken from the wild each year to be sold as “pets” in Asia, Europe, and even the United States. The initial shock of losing their freedom and being confined to a cage can kill 10-20% of wild-caught birds. Of those who survive capture, half will die of starvation, dehydration, suffocation, or disease before reaching their final destination. Researchers in Nicaragua estimate that, to compensate for mortalities, up to four times as many parrots are captured than make it to market. In fact, recognition of the unacceptably high rate of mortality among imported birds helped prompt the U.S. Congress to pass the Wild Bird Conservation Act in 1992. Though the Act effectively reduced the United States from the largest importer of wild-caught birds to one of the smallest, up to 150,000 parrots are illegally smuggled into the U.S. across the Mexican border each year.

WildBirdTradeBlog