Collection: Purple Martin Houses & Gourds
Purple martins are North America's largest swallows — and east of the Rockies, they nest almost exclusively in housing that people provide. Hosting a martin colony is one of birding's most rewarding projects: a single setup can support a dozen or more families that return to your yard year after year.
Houses vs. Gourds: Which Should You Choose?
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Martin houses: Classic multi-room "apartment" designs in aluminum or wood — easy to monitor, with 4 to 24 rooms per house
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Gourds: Research shows martins often prefer gourds — roomier compartments, better rain protection, and less competition between pairs
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Gourd racks: Purpose-built poles holding 8–12 gourds, the setup most serious martin landlords use
Setting Up for Success
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Location: The most open spot in your yard — 40–60 feet from trees and buildings, with clear flyways
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Height: 12–18 feet, on a telescoping or winch pole so you can lower the housing for weekly nest checks
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Entrances: Starling-resistant (SREH/crescent) entrance holes keep invasive starlings out while letting martins in
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Predator guards: A pole guard stops raccoons, snakes, and squirrels from reaching the colony
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Timing: Scouts arrive as early as late January in the South and through April in the North — have housing up before they return
Shop our full range of purple martin houses, gourds, gourd racks, telescoping poles, and colony accessories — everything you need to become a martin landlord.