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Description
Give backyard birds a reason to sing with the Morning Song Birdwatchers’ Blend Wild Bird Food. A premium blend for backyard birding enthusiasts, it includes all the seeds that birds love, like generous portions of black oil sunflower and white millet. A great choice for the avid birder, the combination of seeds will attract and retain an appealing variety of birds—and the addition of safflower seeds will help to exclude some more undesirable species like squirrels. Use it in your hopper, tube or platform feeders, and then sit back and get ready for your next feathered visitor!
Price Score: 66 out of 100 Points
Variety Score: 49 out of 100 Points
Brand Score: 83 out of 100 Points
Ingredients Score: 75 out of 100 Points
Total Score: 71.6 out of 100 Points
Key Benefits
- Premium blend of bird food is specially made for the backyard birding enthusiast.
- Attracts an appealing variety of birds, like Northern Cardinals, Finches, Chickadees and more.
- Mix of grain products, black oil sunflower seed, white prosco millet, peanuts, safflowers seed and calcium carbonate.
- Safflower seed can help deter less welcome birds, as well as pesky squirrels.
- Made with the highest standards in compliance of the FDA’s Food Safety Modernization Act.
Ingredients
Grain Products, Black Oil Sunflower Seed, White Proso Millet, Peanuts, Safflower Seed, Calcium CarbonateSee products with the same ingredients:
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Black Oil Sunflower Seed (2)
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Calcium Carbonate - Harmless ingredient
(155)
Calcium carbonate is a chemical compound with the formula CaCO3. It is a common substance found in rocks as the minerals calcite and aragonite and is the main component of pearls and the shells of marine organisms, snails, and eggs.
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Grain Products (1)
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Peanuts (3)
Peanuts is a syndicated daily and Sunday American comic strip written and illustrated by Charles M. Schulz that ran from October 2, 1950, to February 13, 2000, continuing in reruns afterward. Peanuts is among the most popular and influential in the history of comic strips, with 17,897 strips published in all, making it "arguably the longest story ever told by one human being".
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Safflower Seed (3)
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White Proso Millet (3)