Wild Birds for the 21st Century -- Conservation and Gardening for Birds

Conservation and Gardening for Wild Birds, especially land migratories of N. America

OVERVIEW

This website wildbirds.org presently has a traffic ranking of zero (the smaller the more users). We have probed four pages within the web site wildbirds.org and found thirteen websites referring to wildbirds.org. We have acquired two contacts and addresses for wildbirds.org to help you connect with them. This website wildbirds.org has been online for one thousand three hundred and forty-three weeks, twenty-three hours, fifty-eight minutes, and six seconds.
Pages Analyzed
4
Links to this site
13
Contacts
2
Locations
2
Online Since
Mar 1999

WILDBIRDS.ORG RANKINGS

This website wildbirds.org is seeing varying amounts of traffic for the whole of the year.
Traffic for wildbirds.org

Date Range

1 week
1 month
3 months
This Year
Last Year
All time
Traffic ranking (by month) for wildbirds.org

Date Range

All time
This Year
Last Year
Traffic ranking by day of the week for wildbirds.org

Date Range

All time
This Year
Last Year
Last Month

WILDBIRDS.ORG HISTORY

This website wildbirds.org was first documented on March 17, 1999. It is currently one thousand three hundred and forty-three weeks, twenty-three hours, fifty-eight minutes, and six seconds old.
REGISTERED
March
1999

COMPANY PERIOD OF EXISTANCE

25
YEARS
8
MONTHS
28
DAYS

LINKS TO WEB PAGE

WHAT DOES WILDBIRDS.ORG LOOK LIKE?

Desktop Screenshot of wildbirds.org Mobile Screenshot of wildbirds.org Tablet Screenshot of wildbirds.org

CONTACTS

J.E. Sutter

PERFECT PRIVACY, LLC

12808 Gran Bay Parkway West

Jacksonville, FL, 32258

US

Wild Birds for the 21st Century

PERFECT PRIVACY, LLC

12808 Gran Bay Parkway West

Jacksonville, FL, 32258

US

WILDBIRDS.ORG HOST

I revealed that the main page on wildbirds.org took five hundred and seventy-seven milliseconds to stream. Our web crawlers could not observe a SSL certificate, so therefore I consider this site not secure.
Load time
0.577 seconds
SSL
NOT SECURE
Internet Address
176.28.9.74

NAME SERVERS

ns1.dnshotel.com
ns2.dnshotel.com

SERVER OPERATING SYSTEM

I identified that wildbirds.org is weilding the Apache/2.2.29 (Unix) mod_ssl/2.2.29 OpenSSL/1.0.1e-fips mod_bwlimited/1.4 server.

PAGE TITLE

Wild Birds for the 21st Century -- Conservation and Gardening for Birds

DESCRIPTION

Conservation and Gardening for Wild Birds, especially land migratories of N. America

CONTENT

This website had the following on the site, "An Independent, Non-Profit, Educational Service." Our analyzers analyzed that the web site said " Attention Bird Lovers and Gardeners! Do not unto others what you would not they should do unto you." The Website also stated " But still I am one. I cannot do everything,. But still I can do something, And because I cannot do everything, will not refuse to do the something that I can do. Jennings Parrott in Los Angeles Times. Go Directly to New Report." The website's header had Migratory birds as the most important search term. It was followed by Landscaping for birds, Birdscaping, and conservation of habitat which isn't as ranked as highly as Migratory birds. The next words they uses is conservation of migratory paths. preservation of green space was also included and could not be viewed by search parsers.

VIEW OTHER BUSINESSES

Backyard Bird Watching My Wild Birds

June 1, 2009 by annare89. Well just say yippie for me. I just got a purple martin bird house. Now the purple martins are already back in the united states and have selected their nesting sites, having babies and all that stuff you want purple martins to do in your yard, but I have always wanted a bird house for them and whelp, now I have one. So I broke down and ordered myself a purple martin bird house and will be well prepared for next spring.

Wild Birds Beyond, LLC

It was the first ti.

Wildbirds Peacedrums

Now time for soundcheck, on at 2. All other music is comp.

Wildbirds Broadcasting

History and Legacy of Wild Birds Including Historic Ornithology and Other Topics of Interest. Urban Skunk Eats Dead Martins at Midtown Roost. The critter knew that beneath the trees of the roost, there might be something edible. On Friday, there were at least three tasty carcasses to gnaw on. The carcasses were forlorn, lying in the grass as dead bits of what was once lovely featheration.