ChapelWood

ChapelWood Complete Quartet Feeding Station | 215cm, 4 Feeders

Premium 215cm metal bird feeding station with four differentiated feeders, by ChapelWood

£29.99

The properly considered upgrade for serious bird-feeders - 215cm of metal station, four differentiated feeders (2 seed, 1 peanut, 1 suet) for a wider range of garden visitors. By ChapelWood, the UK garden wildlife specialist.

Key features

  • Substantial 215cm height - tall enough to keep feeders safe from ground predators
  • Four DIFFERENTIATED metal feeders - 2 for seed, 1 peanut, 1 suet/fat ball
  • 45cm arm spread - generous spacing reduces crowding and spillage
  • Metal construction throughout - properly built for British weather
  • Tool-free assembly - no muttering and rummaging through the shed
  • Modern, considered design - looks intentional in a sightline
Material Metal pole and metal feeders throughout
Dimensions Height: 215cm; Arm spread: 45cm
Trusted UK retailer Norfolk family farm

About this product

Full description

If feeding garden birds is one of the loveliest small habits you can build into a garden, doing it properly — with the right station, in the right place, with the right kit — is what turns occasional sparrows into proper resident populations. This is the more considered sister of our Complete Bird Dining Station: the ChapelWood Complete Quartet Feeding Station, a taller, more substantial 215cm metal feeder pole, with four differentiated feeders designed for specific kinds of bird food.

From ChapelWood, our trusted suppliers of garden wildlife kit — chosen because they make sensible, well-designed, hard-wearing equipment for British gardens. The Quartet is one of their flagship dining stations: built for serious garden bird-feeding rather than the cheap-and-cheerful end of the category.

What sets it apart

The Quartet does several things differently from a basic feeding station:

  • Substantial 215cm height — a properly tall feeding station, well above ground predators (cats, rats) and at the right height for birds to feel safe
  • Four differentiated metal feeders — rather than four identical feeders, the Quartet includes: two seed feeders, one peanut feeder, and one suet/fat ball feeder. Different food types for different birds, all set up from day one
  • 45cm spread between arms — generous spacing keeps the birds from crowding and the seed from spilling
  • Quality metal construction throughout — both the pole and the feeders. Built to stand out through years of British weather
  • Tool-free assembly — pole sections fit together by hand; no muttering and rummaging through the shed for the right Allen key
  • Modern, considered design — the Quartet looks intentionally designed rather than functional-only, which matters when you're putting a 215cm feature into a sightline from the kitchen window

Choosing between our two ChapelWood feeding stations

We stock two ChapelWood feeding stations and they suit different setups. Worth knowing the difference before you choose:

  • Complete Bird Dining Station — 204cm tall, four matching feeders. The everyday, straightforward, sensible-price-point option. Fine for most gardens; particularly good if you're new to bird feeding and want to get started.
  • Complete Quartet Feeding Station (this) — 215cm tall, four differentiated feeders (2 seed, 1 peanut, 1 suet). The more considered choice for committed bird-feeders, where you want each feeder optimised for its specific food type rather than four feeders that all look the same.

Both are well-made and both will serve you for years. The Quartet is the choice if you care about doing it properly from the start, or if you're upgrading from a basic feeder set.

What you'll attract

The four differentiated feeders, set up properly, will draw a wider range of birds than a single-food station. Different birds prefer different feeders:

  • Tits and small finches — particularly drawn to the peanut feeder and to sunflower hearts in the seed feeders. Blue tits, great tits, coal tits, goldfinches, greenfinches; with luck, long-tailed tits in winter flocks
  • Robins, dunnocks and wrens — ground feeders that glean from spillage. Mealworms in one of the seed feeders will particularly draw robins
  • House sparrows — arrive in sociable gangs once they've decided your garden is reliable; happy on any of the feeders
  • Starlings — the proper showmen, particularly drawn to suet and fat balls
  • Nuthatches and woodpeckers — the more occasional visitors, particularly if you're near woodland; peanuts and suet are their food
  • Bullfinches and siskins — with luck and patience, drawn especially to sunflower hearts and niger seed

The genuine advantage of differentiated feeders is the breadth of visitor list. A single seed-only setup attracts mostly finches and sparrows; a properly stocked Quartet draws everything from blue tits to woodpeckers.

Where to put it

The right position makes the difference between a busy feeding station and an ignored one:

  • Within sight of a window — the kitchen sink, the breakfast table, somewhere you'll spend time looking at it. The pleasure of feeding birds is much reduced if you can't see them
  • 2–4 metres from shrubs or small trees — birds want nearby cover to perch on between trips and to escape to if a sparrowhawk appears. But not too close; you also want clear flight paths in and out
  • Not directly above a path or seating area — birds aren't tidy eaters, and the ground beneath accumulates hulls and droppings
  • A safe distance from reflective windows — birds bolting from the station can collide with windows. Either a few metres' distance or window decals if you're closer
  • On grass or in a border — both work; grass underneath provides accidental ground-feeding for blackbirds and dunnocks
  • Considering cat sightlines — if you have or are visited by cats, position with their preferred ambush spots in mind. Birds need clear visibility around the station

Specifications

  • Height: 215cm
  • Spread (arm reach): 45cm
  • Material: Metal throughout (pole and feeders)
  • Feeders included: 4 differentiated metal feeders — 2 seed, 1 peanut, 1 suet/fat ball
  • Assembly: Tool-free; pole sections fit together by hand
  • Use: Outdoor garden, year-round
  • Made by: ChapelWood (Smart Garden Products)

Please verify feeder configuration and finish colour against the specific listing image — ChapelWood occasionally vary specifications between batches.

Garden birds and natural pest control

One quietly excellent thing about feeding garden birds: the more birds you attract, the more pest control you get for free. Insectivorous birds — tits, robins, dunnocks, wrens, finches in their nestling phase — eat enormous quantities of garden pests through spring and summer. A pair of blue tits feeding nestlings will get through several hundred caterpillars a day; long-tailed tits work through aphid colonies methodically; robins follow you round the vegetable garden cleaning up leatherjackets and other soil pests as you dig.

It's why a feeding station like this works particularly well alongside our biological pest controls and the wider organic-gardening kit we stock. Encourage the birds with winter feeding; they'll repay you with the equivalent of free, gentle, ongoing pest control through the growing season.

What else helps

  • Keep it consistently stocked — particularly through winter. Birds quickly learn which gardens are reliable; an empty feeder during a cold snap can be genuinely damaging to local bird populations
  • Provide fresh water — one of the most underappreciated requirements of garden birds, especially in dry summers and in winter when ponds and puddles freeze. A simple shallow dish refreshed daily makes a real difference
  • Vary food with the seasons — high-fat suet and peanuts through winter; sunflower hearts year-round; mealworms in spring to support nestlings. The Quartet's differentiated feeders make this easy
  • Keep feeders clean — rinse and brush feeders monthly, more often if you spot unhealthy birds. A weak solution of warm soapy water and a long-handled brush is all that's needed
  • Plant for them too — sunflowers, teasels, sedums and ornamental grasses produce seed that birds harvest naturally through autumn and winter
  • Leave a wild corner — a small area of unmown grass, brambles, or piled leaves provides nesting material, insects, and shelter

As a gift

A proper bird feeding station is one of the genuinely thoughtful gifts a gardener can receive. The Quartet in particular is the gift for someone who'll appreciate the considered design and the differentiated feeders rather than the basic kit. Particularly suited to:

  • A committed garden-watcher — someone who already feeds the birds and would love the upgrade to a properly designed station
  • A retired or recently-retired gardener — the pleasure of the kitchen-window view, properly equipped
  • An organic gardener — the natural-pest-control angle is a quiet acknowledgement of how they like to garden
  • A house-warming for someone moving into a place with a garden — the proper kit for the new outdoor space
  • A significant birthday or Christmas — pair with a sack of premium bird seed and a bird identification book for an immediately usable, properly-considered gift

About ChapelWood

ChapelWood are specialists in garden wildlife products — well-designed, hard-wearing, sensibly-priced kit for British gardens. We stock their range because they make the unglamorous wildlife-care products properly: feeding stations that don't wobble, feeders that birds actually use, and equipment built to stand out through years of British weather. The Quartet is one of their best-known designs and a properly considered upgrade on basic feeding stations.

A small thought: there's a particular pleasure in coming downstairs on a winter morning and seeing the kitchen window framed by a busy, social little world of garden birds going about their breakfast. Different species at different feeders, the slow appearance of light on a cold morning, the tea in your hands. It's the kind of small daily good thing that justifies its own quiet effort year after year — and a properly equipped Quartet station is the kit that makes it work.

What's included
1 x 215cm metal feeding station pole
4 x differentiated metal feeders: 2 x seed, 1 x peanut, 1 x suet/fat ball
Care and use
- Rinse and brush feeders monthly with warm soapy water (more often if disease appears)
- Refill consistently - especially through winter
- Provide fresh water alongside (a shallow dish refreshed daily)
- Position to allow nearby cover (shrubs/trees 2-4m away) for birds to perch
- Reposition periodically to vary the spillage spread

Pairs well with

Other products from the potting shed that work alongside this one.