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Simple beginner bird house - PEP BB dimensional.sand.birdhouse

BB dimensional lumber woodworking - sand badge
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Gunnar Gebhard wrote:I put on a birdhouse building activity for our home school group (any tips on how to work that into a community BB?).  



PEP - Community - Sand - Teach 1 hr workshop to 8 people
https://permies.com/wiki/101825/pep-community/Teach-workshop-PEP-BB-community

PEP - Community - Straw - Teach a 1.5hr workshop to 6 people
https://permies.com/wiki/151496/pep-community/Teach-Hour-Workshop-PEP-BB

PEP - Community - Straw - Teach a 6hr workshop to 5 people
https://permies.com/wiki/151495/pep-community/Teach-Hour-Workshop-PEP-BB

PEP - Community - Straw - Set up for a 6hr workshop
https://permies.com/wiki/124914/pep-bb-community-straw-set-workshop
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Submission flagged incomplete
This is a long and meandering post, with a short video! Bottom line, I built this birdhouse... then rehabbed it, then hung it. Verification is below...

Back in 2010, while living in Alexandria, VA, I took a fancy to building birdhouses. A lot of birdhouses. Luckily, I wrote a blog about it back then, and still have several of them which I am placing around my property for the birds coming this spring:

https://jimgarlits.wordpress.com/2010/07/03/for-the-birds/

Here's a YouTube video of a couple of the birdhouses sitting on my fence in the middle of a rain storm in 2012:



And finally, here is a less than 2-minute video of me fixing the roof on one birdhouse that I personally made in 2010, rehabbed and hung on a tree in my permaculture playground in 2024. I hope this suffices because I put a lot of effort into building and repairing it!  



Thanks...

j
Staff note (gir bot) :

Timothy Norton flagged this submission as not complete.
BBV price: 1
Note: These look great but not sufficient enough for this BB. Please add photos/video of the lumber you started with and midway during construction. Great birdhouses you have there, maybe make another?

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Approved submission
Second try on basic birdhouse, with faux-snarky beginning because the first was rejected:



j

Staff note (gir bot) :

Timothy Norton approved this submission.
Note: Well done! Great video.

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Decided to use some of the wood that's been laying around in the barn since who knows when. I used the "5 minute" video for reference, but I also did some research on what the local birds will actually use. If I did well, this house should attract a House Wren: 4x4 floor, 1" entrance hole near the top. No perch, since they can be used by predators. I also put a small hole in the bottom for drainage.
Since it's mystery wood, I gave it a coat of linseed oil. The plank I used definitely felt hard to cut, so I think it's hardwood, but I figured better safe than sorry! I hung it up at the edge of the woods with some rawhide.
plank.jpg
mystery barn wood
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parts cut out
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halfdone.jpg
mostly assembled, before oil coat
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hanging1.jpg
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Gunnar Gebhard approved this submission.
Note: Looks pretty good!  It can be good to build in access panels for fall clean out.

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Mike Haasl wrote:This is a badge bit (BB) that is part of the PEP curriculum.  Completing this BB is part of getting the sand badge in Dimensional Lumber Woodworking.

Birds are nice, let's build a house for them!

Warning - This video is exceedingly optimistic about what you can do in under 5 minutes.



To complete this BB, the minimum requirements are:
 - build a simple beginner bird house
 - a bird might want to live in it (maybe a really ugly and desperate bird)
 - It won't kill the bird
 - Made from wood, nails and/or screws - no glue
 - 5" wide or greater
 - Weather resistant design - for the bird and for the longevity of the house

To document your completion of the BB, provide photographic or video (<2 minutes long) of the following:
- Wood you're starting with
- Bird house under construction
- Bird house installed in its final location

Clarifications:
- A bit tung oil or linseed oil on the exterior is acceptable.  Using rot resistant woods that don't need protection is about ten times better than using lesser wood treated with oil.




 
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I used a left over piece of wood from a project
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I just used mostly screws and some nails to put it together
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I sealed it with some beeswax
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In its final spot
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Gunnar Gebhard approved this submission.

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Approved submission
Built this bird house today which started as working on this dimensional lumber bit when realized I could do one better and really get into making it for a specific bird and put some more thought into it so I'm hopeful it can also count for animal care, where I have submitted it as well. It meets the requirements of both.

I used cedar planks I had leftover from the playhouse I built earlier this summer. Planks were 5.5" wide so it fits the minimum dimension requirement and is made of naturally weather-resistant wood. I did not seal or oil it at all. Nailed together which was a fun change of pace for me - I generally exclusively work with screws. Nails were a nice change especially for something like this.
IMG_6397.jpeg
wood I started with
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cut to size and nipped off the edges of the floor for drainage
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under construction
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installed in final location
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another install shot
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Swivel nail side functions to allow cleanout. This took me a few tries to get right.
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Gunnar Gebhard approved this submission.
Note: Good idea to include clean out access.  2-4-1 is awesome when you can get it, it SHOULD count in animal care as well! WooHoo

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I followed the posted video and used an untreated cedar fence panel, 5 1/2in wide, and SS screws.  I treated it with linseed oil, installed a SS eyebolt, and mounted it to a tree outside my daughter's window. I'm realizing now that I overdid it -- I didn't need to oil it since I used cedar.

To complete this BB, the minimum requirements are:
 - build a simple beginner bird house
 - a bird might want to live in it (maybe a really ugly and desperate bird)
 - It won't kill the bird
 - Made from wood, nails and/or screws - no glue
 - 5" wide or greater
 - Weather resistant design - for the bird and for the longevity of the house

To document your completion of the BB, provide photographic or video (<2 minutes long) of the following:
- Wood you're starting with
- Bird house under construction
- Bird house installed in its final location

Clarifications:
- A bit tung oil or linseed oil on the exterior is acceptable.  Using rot resistant woods that don't need protection is about ten times better than using lesser wood treated with oil.
wood-I-m-starting-with.jpg
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birdhouse-under-construction-1.jpg
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birdhouse-under-construction-2.jpg
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Bird-house-installed-in-its-final-location.jpg
[Thumbnail for Bird-house-installed-in-its-final-location.jpg]
Staff note (gir bot) :

Rebekah Harmon approved this submission.
Note: love it!! I think your extra oil will just increase the house's longevity

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Approved submission
Much like the textiles weekend I had with my mom earlier this year when I made my dishcloth and patchwork pillow, I took the holiday visit at my parents' this week as an opportunity to do a woodworking project with my dad - my first birdhouse! At least, my first that I can remember.

I copied an Audubon design from other birdhouses my dad had already made up. I used a cedar fence board that was on hand, and I worked with some inherited hand saws and the Balinese scoop knife I'd gifted him.

The bottom has some air holes for circulation in warm weather, and in addition to making the side rotate for easy cleaning, I also put a little "peg" nail to help keep it shut when the birdies are at home. The hole is sized for a wren. We'll see if some show up!
Birdhouse-1.jpg
Cedar fence planks I started with
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Birdhouse-2.jpg
I didn't have to use a hand saw, but it was nice to practice technique with my pop
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Here's a foothold technique I learned from Balinese mask carvers - using my scoop knife to clean some splinters
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Assembly
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Assembly
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Hung it on the black locust out back.
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birdhouse-7.jpg
Coming in a little over 5 inches wide
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Alexandra Malecki approved this submission.
Note: nicely done!

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Approved submission
i built a simple beginner bird house for under $5 in under 5 minutes days!

supplies (found lying around):
-1"x5.5"x6' scrap cedar board
-random screws & nails
-bit of wire
-pencil
-ruler
-circular saw
-hammer
-power drill
-Build a Bird House for Under $5 in Under 5 Minutes
-courage in the face of the unknown (carpentry)

day 1: 1 july 2025
i rummaged about in outbuildings for suitable wood and came up with a lead-painted monstrosity that helpfully educated me on why trying to strip lead paint is simply not worth the bother. i then dove back in for a second go-round in different outbuildings and emerged with a promising untreated piece of wood. i hauled it back to the house to my grandmother for identification (cedar), marked my cuts, and went on the hunt for a saw. all three manual saws were rusted beyond use, so i opted for the least-intimidating power tool, the jigsaw. the jigsaw did not appreciate being used on cedar. sweaty and defeated after multiple hours of scavenging, i collected a circular saw for future research and slunk back to the house with my tail between my legs and my cedar plank in two crooked pieces.

day 2: 2 july 2025
a day spent mostly stewing in resentment of my own ignorance.

day 3: 3 july 2025
grandma felt up to teaching me how to use the circular saw - hoorah! i sliced everything up, checked out the viability of the build with my less-than-expert cuts, made a couple trims to make sure the pieces fit together with minimal gaps/awkwardness, and scrounged up some spare screws and nails. for the entrance hole on the front board, i actually drilled a bunch of holes with the biggest drill bit we have (not very big) and sort of immersion blended them into one big hole with the help of a carving tool to scrap down the sides. it's slightly larger than a quarter and, shall we say, charmingly irregular. after i put the whole bird house together, i cradled it to my bosom briefly but lovingly. i left it on my work table to watch over me as i slept, finally at peace with the knowledge that i no longer need to fear circular saws beyond a certain healthy respect.

day 4: 4 july 2025
my first dimensional woodworking project has declared its independence from the climate-controlled house. it's hanging/wedged about 7 feet off the ground, facing south in the lower branches of the black gum tree to the northeast of the big house.

concluding remarks...
remedial shop class rocks. i look forward to revisiting and improving this bird house in the future after observing how it integrates (or doesn't...) into the landscape.
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me with my back to the camera holding my board in the granary room filled with scrap wood
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i am 90% sure this tree is a black gum
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my bird house hanging in the lower branches of a tree
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haphazard shot of nailing together the bottom & sides at my work desk
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Pete Podurgiel approved this submission.
Note: Good job!

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I have a lot of shorter offcuts and such of this 100 year old true dimension old growth pine I salvaged from an old house to use on my pole barn build. It's mostly heart pine and therefore rot resistant and I have long thought I'd make birdhouses out of it. This was the first attempt which brought up some issues. In the future I'll have to deal with the cupping in the old wood better as when I screwed them together it would want to crack, and also it's rather heavy. This was pretty much the design for blue birds in the book pictured. It has a double roof with wide overhang, drip edge kerfs, and the corners nipped off the floor for mitigating water intrusion. I gave it some linseed oil on the exterior for added protection and mounted on an old power pole, the odd wooden bits below it are the remnants of a weird trellis I made in the past.
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old boards, cut
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construction
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mounted
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Staff note (gir bot) :

Someone approved this submission.
Note: Good idea on the drip edge kerfs, I'll have to try that!

Yeah. What he said. Totally. Wait. What? Sorry, I was looking at this tiny ad:
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https://permies.com/t/359868/montana-community-seeking-people-gardeners
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