
24 December 2025
In winter, holly (Ilex) shows off its evergreen leaves and bright red berries just in time for Christmas traditions, decorations and songs.
The Holly and the Ivy (Cecil_James_Sharp_1911, embedded from Wikimedia Commons)
Holly is so beautiful that we often use it as landscape plant, but the real purpose behind that beauty is to attract wildlife to eat the berries. Though holly berries are mildly poisonous to humans and dogs, they are readily eaten by deer, squirrels and many birds, especially cedar waxwings and American robins.
Cedar waxwings can strip a holly tree or hedge of all its berries in a matter of minutes. They start at the top and work their way to the bottom, then to fallen fruit on the ground.
Large holly trees, 40-50 feet tall, can take a flock all day. In between feasting forays they wait and watch in nearby bare trees.

American robins cannot compete with 50 to 100 cedar waxwings so they hope to eat their fill before the waxwings arrive.

Have you planted a holly tree but it doesn’t bear fruit? Here are some reasons why.
Fun Fact
Holly leaves are more prickly at the bottom of the tree than at the top. Thorns keep mammals from plundering the low hanging fruit so the birds can get first crack at the berries and spread the seeds far and wide.
I have a beautiful Holly Tree in my front yard!
Wishes to you and your husband for a Merry, Merry Christmas, Kate!! I’m looking forward to 2026, and all I will learn from you!
Amazing. Never seen anything like that with the birds flocking to the bush in such a way.
I need to get that in my yard!!