Bird Feeding Stake (Raw Steel, Two Arms)
SKU: 37858922342

Bird Feeding Stake (Raw Steel, Two Arms)

Sale price$31.50 Regular price$35.00
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Description

Bird Feeding Stake (Raw Steel, Two Arms)There are few quieter pleasures in a garden than watching birds find a new feeder for the first time the cautious approach, the brief hover, the small confidence as they realise this is a place they can come back to. This generously sized feeding stake gives them somewhere proper to land, with two arms to hang feeders, fat balls or a water dish from, and the height to keep things safely above the reach of most cats. Made in Norfolk by independent

There are few quieter pleasures in a garden than watching birds find a new feeder for the first time — the cautious approach, the brief hover, the small confidence as they realise this is a place they can come back to. This generously-sized feeding stake gives them somewhere proper to land, with two arms to hang feeders, fat balls or a water dish from, and the height to keep things safely above the reach of most cats. Made in Norfolk by independent maker LV Bespoke and supplied in raw steel that develops a soft rust patina over time, letting the piece settle into your planting as if it had always been part of the garden.

What it's designed for

The two arms each take a hanging item — most commonly:

  • Seed feeders for sunflower hearts, niger seed, mealworms, or general mixed seed
  • Fat ball or suet feeders — particularly valued in winter when energy-dense food makes a real difference
  • A hanging water dish or bird bath — equally important and often overlooked
  • A combination — one feeder plus one water source is a popular and very effective setup

The generous 1450mm height puts the feeders at a proper viewing level from a kitchen window or sitting room, and out of easy reach of cats and ground predators. The 560mm width between the arms gives birds enough space that two species can feed at once without squabbling.

Birds you'll come to know

A well-placed feeding stake in a UK cottage garden brings in a wonderful cast of regular visitors — different species at different times of day and year:

  • Blue tits, great tits, and coal tits — acrobatic, cheerful, often the first to arrive
  • Goldfinches — particularly fond of niger seed, and worth the effort of buying it
  • Robins, dunnocks, and wrens — quieter visitors, often feeding on what falls to the ground below
  • House sparrows and chaffinches — the gentle squabbling regulars
  • Greenfinches and bullfinches — less common now, but a feeder helps support them
  • Nuthatches and woodpeckers, in gardens near mature trees — including, with some luck, the great spotted woodpecker on a fat ball feeder

Where to put it

A few thoughts from years of feeding birds in our own garden:

  • Near cover — within a few metres of a hedge, shrub, or tree gives nervous birds somewhere to retreat to. They'll feel safer and feed more readily
  • But not in cover — too close to dense planting gives cats an ambush position
  • In view of a window — the whole point is the watching, after all. Make sure you can see it from where you spend time
  • Sheltered from prevailing wind — birds prefer feeding without the seed swinging wildly, and feeders last longer too
  • Pushed firmly into the ground — the long stake gives a stable footing in most soils, but in very loose or sandy ground a small concrete plinth or paving slab base can help

Be patient in the early days. It can take birds a fortnight or more to discover a new feeder — but once the first one finds it, the rest follow within days.

A small tip on feeders

If you're new to feeding birds, the most useful single feeder to start with is a tube feeder of sunflower hearts. They're high-energy, husk-free (no mess on the ground), and attract the widest range of garden birds — tits, finches, sparrows, robins. From there, adding a fat ball or suet feeder for winter and a niger seed feeder for goldfinches will give you a proper spread.

Clean your feeders every week or two with hot soapy water — bird feeders, like garden tools, do their best work when looked after.

The rust patina

Supplied in raw steel and designed to develop a natural rust patina over time, particularly outdoors. Within a few weeks of weather it begins to take on a warm, mottled rust tone; over months and seasons the patina deepens and softens further. The result is a piece that feels rooted in your garden rather than imposed onto it — and one that the birds, importantly, treat as part of their landscape rather than something new and alarming.

If you'd prefer to slow this process, a clear protective wax (Renaissance Wax works well) or matte clear lacquer applied on arrival will hold off the rust considerably. Most owners, however, come to love the patina once it arrives.

About LV Bespoke

LV Bespoke is an independent Norfolk maker producing handcrafted metal accessories for the garden and home. Each piece is made by hand in raw steel — designed to do its job quietly, age gracefully, and look like it belongs. We're proud to stock their work; objects with this kind of character don't come from factories, they come from somebody's careful hands.

Specifications

  • Height: approximately 1450mm
  • Width: approximately 560mm (between the two arms)
  • Arms: two, for hanging feeders, fat balls, or water
  • Material: raw steel
  • Finish: designed to develop a natural rust patina
  • Use: outdoor only
  • Made by: LV Bespoke, Norfolk

Feeders, fat balls, suet, and seed are not included — choose your own depending on the birds you'd most like to encourage.

Shipping Notes
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SKU: 37858922342

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Chingyuan
Fort Morgan, US
★★★★★ 5
Highly recommended!
Format: Hardcover
I first saw this book at a relative’s house and was immediately drawn in by its content. There’s no text at all, yet it captures children’s interest so strongly—especially when learning the concept of numbers. The illustrations are also beautiful. When my child didn’t yet understand numbers, it was still fun to recognize the animals or see what the characters in the pictures were doing. I really love this book.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2025
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KB
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 5
A Multi-faceted, beautiful book for babies through primary grades.
Format: Hardcover
Our second generation is now loving this beautiful, clever, playful book. Although there are no words, the story line is a delight. A watercolored village develops one page to the next starting with 0 and ending with 12. The pictures add one item in each category for each new number, building on the previous scene. Readers can find and count buildings, children, adults, pine trees, cherry trees, and an assortment of animals. In addition, in a lovely subtle manner, the four northern hemisphere seasons pass from January to December. The details of adult and child activities through time and seasons can be noted. Anno's creativity in this genre is unsurpassed. For my children, and now for my grandson, this book evokes fascination on several levels both aesthetic and intellectual. Start using it as a baby word book, and it will last as a joy throughout early childhood. Not every baby book must be a board book. Teaching children to turn pages gently is easy to do and adds to the amazing, shared experience.
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Reviewed in the United States on February 22, 2015
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Chopper
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 5
Gorgeous book!
Format: Hardcover
Read this over and over with my own children and they loved it. Buying for friends' children/grandchildren and they are loving it, too. Timeless, lots to capture kids' interest and counting. The suggested age is 3 and up, but we used it earlier than 3 years of age; it depends on the child. We're buying them now for newborns figuring they'll "grow into it."
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Reviewed in the United States on September 16, 2021
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Dan
Grantham, US
★★★★★ 4
A truly original concept picture book. Unlike most counting ...
Format: Hardcover
A truly original concept picture book. Unlike most counting concept books that only show one item type (like 2 balls on the page about 2) this book has many items to count on each number page (3 trees, 3 trains, 3 cows, etc, on the pages about the number 3). You have to search around to find each of the items because the author moves the items around each time. :) Yes, it's not as flashy, but it's got what really counts!
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Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2016
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Elisa's Mom
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent early math book
Format: Paperback
I found this book on a recommended Early Math reading list posted on the PBS Parents website. Since there are no words in this book, there is nothing to actually read to your child. But it is likely one of the longest 12 page books I've read. And it is by far the most significant number book my 3 year old has read. Anno uses a town to depict and define numbers 0-12, the seasons, and the months of the year. The seasons and months are recognizeable, but not the focus like the numbers are. For the number 0, you see a blank landscape with a small river. When the child turns the page, he sees a large number 1 on the right side of the book and in the landscape one lone building, one tree, one sun, one snowman.... There is also a set of blocks on the left side of the book, with one block colored in. Thus, the child can see the number 1 represented as a numeral, as a block (of a set of 10), and as an object (one building, one tree, one person). As you turn the pages and the numbers increase, a village forms. The final page is the number 12 -- a full village at Christmas time, complete with 12 reindeer in the sky. As a parent, I enjoy having my daughter "read" to me. But I am most amazed by how the book has helped her to grasp the concept of numbers. As she explained, "0, Mommy. Because there's nothing there."
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Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2009

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