White-breasted Nuthatch
Year-round ResidentAbout the White-breasted Nuthatch
Watch for this acrobat walking headfirst down tree trunks. A reliable visitor to peanut and suet feeders.
When to See Them in Colorado
Year-round. The White-breasted Nuthatch is a permanent resident along the Front Range and one of Colorado's most reliable backyard visitors. You can spot them at your feeders in every season — from the depths of a Denver winter to the peak of summer heat. Their population tends to peak in late fall and winter when resident birds flock together and become even more feeder-dependent.
Birding tip: Morning hours — especially the first two hours after sunrise — are when resident species like the White-breasted Nuthatch are most active and vocal. Set up your feeders in a spot with good sightlines from a window and you'll rarely miss them.
What They Eat
In Colorado, the White-breasted Nuthatch's diet reflects what's locally available across seasons. At feeders, they're most drawn to Peanuts, suet, sunflower seed, which mirrors the high-energy foods they seek in the wild. Offering the right food in the right feeder is the single biggest factor in successfully attracting White-breasted Nuthatchs to your yard.
During nesting season (typically April–July on the Front Range), White-breasted Nuthatchs also rely heavily on insects as a protein source for their young — so a pesticide-free garden benefits them beyond just the feeder.
How to Attract Them to Your Yard
Creating a welcoming habitat for White-breasted Nuthatchs in Colorado is straightforward once you understand what they need. Here are the most effective steps our experts recommend:
- Offer black-oil sunflower seed in a tube or hopper feeder — this is the single most effective food for attracting seed-eating species at Colorado elevations.
- Hang a suet cage loaded with a high-fat suet cake. In Colorado's cold winters, suet provides the caloric density birds need to survive freezing overnight temperatures.
- Add a peanut feeder or tray filled with shelled or in-shell peanuts. High in protein and fat, peanuts attract White-breasted Nuthatchs and a wide variety of other backyard species.
- Provide a clean water source year-round. A heated bird bath is one of the best investments you can make for winter birding along the Front Range — fresh water is often scarcer than food on cold days.
- Plant native shrubs and trees that produce berries or shelter nesting birds. Serviceberry, chokecherry, and native viburnums are excellent choices for Colorado front-range gardens.
- Keep feeders within 3 feet or beyond 30 feet of windows to minimize window strike risk — the most common cause of feeder-bird fatalities.
- Clean feeders regularly. Moldy or wet seed drives birds away and can spread disease through your local bird population. WBU No-Mess blends minimize hulls and spoilage.
Attract More White-breasted Nuthatchs to Your Yard
The right combination of food, feeders, and water makes all the difference. Our Colorado-tested recommendations:
No-Mess Seed Blends
Our signature Colorado blends are formulated for Front Range birds and contain no filler seed. Shell-free — no mess under your feeder, and every kernel gets eaten.
Shop Seed BlendsSuet & Suet Feeders
High-calorie suet cakes are a winter staple for clinging birds like White-breasted Nuthatchs. Our tail-prop suet cages accommodate woodpecker-style feeders for the full dining experience.
Shop SuetBird Baths & Water Features
Fresh water draws more birds than any feeder. Our heated bird baths keep water liquid through Colorado's subzero nights — and the dripper adds the sound motion that catches birds' attention from far away.
Shop Bird Baths