Washington Dept. of Fish and Wildlife BACKYARD WILDLIFE SANCTUARY

Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Program
Landscape Design for Wildlife
Nest Boxes for Birds
Woodworking Projects for Wildlife
Hummingbirds and How to Attract Them
Winter Bird Feeding
Ponds and Birdbaths
Butterflies and How to Attract Them
Book Resource and Sales
Related Links
  National WILDLIFE Federation
  Backyard Wildlife Habitat™ Certification Partners
 

Get ADOBE Acrobat Reader
Dowload the FREE Adobe
Acrobat Reader
to view
and print PDF documents.

Download Application
Would you like to advertise your wildlife sanctuary?
The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife looks forward to acknowledging your efforts to provide habitat for wildlife where you live or work. Fill out this application and within two weeks of receiving it, we’ll send you a personalized certificate suitable for framing, a yard sign to educate others about your habitat project, and a subscription to our “Crossing Paths” newsletter.
Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary:
A program to help you manage wildlife around your home and property

Good environmental stewardship begins in our own backyards

A bald eagle soars over a high bluff surveying the waters below. A red-tailed hawk with outstretched wings drifts effortlessly over a forest and open field. Hummingbirds zip by your window on their way to the flower garden. The morning dew highlights fragile spider webs at the forest edge. This is Washington State -- a great place to live.

A land we all love, yet one we may be smothering with our numbers. Over 35,000 acres of wildlife habitat is converted to housing and other development each year here in Washington. If we continue at this rate, many of our native wildlife species will have few places to live and visit. So the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife instituted the Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Program to help offset some of this habitat loss. While many of us may not realize it, a property owner is also a habitat manager. The things we do, or do not do, in the vicinity of our home have an effect on the quality of habitat for dozens of wildlife species.

The Department of Fish and Wildlife wants to help you understand and appreciate the wildlife around your home. You can make your property a better place for songbirds and other wildlife species that have lived in your area long before people began to settle.

Ordering the Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Packet:

You can receive the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife's Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary packet by sending us your address along with a $5 check payable to WDFW to cover printing and postage.The packet contains information that will help you become a wildlife habitat manager on your own property. If you are a Washington resident, you also can register your yard as an official Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary by filling out the packet's habitat inventory application and returning it with another $5 to cover the cost of a weather-proof sign for your yard and a frame-able certificate. You can also register at http://wdfw.wa.gov/lists/ to receive e-mail notice of new editions of the newsletter "Crossing Paths" that provides continuing information on backyard stewardship.

The Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife has partnered with the National Wildlife Federation so that you can certify your yard with both organizations in one easy step.
Get started now!

Eastside (East of Cascades Ridge)

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Program
2315 North Discovery Place
Spokane Valley, WA 99216-1566

Westside (West of Cascades Ridge)

Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife
Backyard Wildlife Sanctuary Program
16018 Mill Creek Blvd.
Mill Creek, WA 98012

The Backyard Sanctuary Packet contains:

  • A pamphlet on Landscaping for Wildlife which tells you how to develop a plan, how to best locate your plants, how to arrange them, what height plants you should consider and finally, how to implement your landscape plan.
  • A list of plants to attract birds specific to your area. Learn about the sun, soil, and water requirements and attractive features of each plant to help you decide which are best for your landscape.
  • How to best feed birds, including information on the right kinds of seeds and feeders.
  • The kinds of birds most commonly found in your backyard at different times of the year, along with natural history information for each bird.
  • Tips for attracting hummingbirds. Including a list of the best plants and the use of feeders.
  • Tips for attracting butterflies, including a list of the best plants and flowering times.
  • How to design and make bird houses for wrens, chickadees, and other cavity-nesting birds.
  • A list of references for more information on feeding, housing, landscaping, and other activities devoted to your backyard sanctuary.
  • An application form to enroll your yard as an official backyard sanctuary. When you enroll you will receive an outdoor sign (example shown above), and a signed certificate.
  • Much more!!!
Want to make your property better for wildlife?

Consider these suggestions:

  1. Plant more trees and shrubs. Remember, vegetation is the key to attracting a variety of wildlife. Dead trees (snags) are especially valuable to wildlife; try to keep them on your property if they pose no safety hazard.
  2. Add a birdbath, garden pond, or other source of water. A safe place to bathe and drink will act as a magnet to many animals.
  3. Add bird feeders. A feeder for millet, one for sunflower seeds, and one for suet will appeal to a wide variety of birds.
  4. Add bird houses, or better yet, try to leave snags on your property. Cavity-nesting birds have been especially impacted by urban development. A bird house of the proper dimensions can substitute for snags where these birds used to nest.
  5. Cover any openings under the eaves or other places around your house where house sparrows and starlings may nest. These non-native birds are undesirable competitors for food and nesting cavities and many native birds have suffered because of their presence. Bird houses and feeders should be designed and managed to reduce use by sparrows and starlings.
  6. Control cats that may be prowling around your sanctuary; they can be especially harmful to birds that feed or nest on the ground. Visit the American Bird Conservancy Website for information on their "Cats Indoors!" program for ideas on how to keep your cats indoors.
  7. Get your neighbors interested in backyard wildlife. Several adjacent yards with good wildlife resources are even more effective. Most wildlife species need areas larger than a single lot can provide. Remember, every homeowner is a habitat manager, and the collective actions of conscientious homeowners will benefit the wildlife that shares your living space.


Find a bug or error in the system? Let us know about it!
© 1997-05 Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife

E-mail <webmaster@dfw.wa.gov>