Attracting House Wrens to Your Yard
The male house wren arrives in late April or early May from southerly
wintering grounds to establish a spring nesting site. He will stake out a
territory of up to one
acre, threatening, chasing and even fighting
intruders from his claim. While males wait for females to arrive, they
become devoted nest-builders. An individual will build up to a half dozen
nests to let birds in the area know there is no vacancy at that site. When
the female arrives, she chooses just one nest and she will then completely
rebuild the nest twig by twig.
Wrens have been known to nest almost anywhere. Nearly any hole a wren can
get into is an appropriate place to build - a flowerpot, a grill, a mailbox, a boot,
an abandoned woodpecker hole, a basket, even a pair of pants on the
clothesline.
Wrens will also readily use a man-made house. The hole opening on a wren
house should be between 1 and 1-1/4 inches. The wren, one of our smaller
birds, will have no trouble getting in a hole this size but starlings, house
sparrows and predators won't be able to enter.
House wrens feed almost entirely on insects. They will also occasionally
visit a feeder which offers suet, peanut butter, cornbread and white bread crumbs.
(source: duncraft.com)