Half Acre Homestead » hummingbirds http://www.halfacrehomestead.com Battle Ground, Washington Mon, 02 Jan 2012 04:15:44 +0000 en-US hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.5.1 Successful Hummingbird Flirtation http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/successful-hummingbird-flirtation/ http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/successful-hummingbird-flirtation/#comments Fri, 10 Apr 2009 18:49:00 +0000 Lisa Linderman http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/successful-hummingbird-flirtation/

I brought my new hummingbird feeders home on Tuesday, and filled them with homemade sugar nectar that afternoon. I hung the fancier set off the front porch, where they can be seen from the kitchen window, and hung the more utilitarian set off the bathroom window, where they can be seen from the backyard, and more importantly, can’t be seen from the other set of feeders.

By Wednesday, I had hummingbirds.

By Thursday, I had to refill the smaller utilitarian feeder.

This morning, just standing around getting ready for work, I saw two hummingbirds visit the smaller feeder, and at least three different hummingbirds visit the larger front porch feeder. At one point, one of the hummingbirds was spooked by the chickadees building a nest 5 feet away, and the hummer flew over to the giant rose of sharon bush where I keep most of my birdfeeders and the birdbath. It actually perched on the top of the bush, and let me check it out with my binoculars. What a beautiful iridescent red bib it had! From flipping through my bird books, I’d have to say it was an Anna’s hummingbird, but it also looks like we had some rufous hummingbirds this morning.

In my area (the great Pacific Northwet, just north east of Portland, Oregon), we have Anna’s hummingbirds all year round, and we have rufous hummingbirds in the warmer parts of the year. There may be others, but those are the ones I’ve been told to keep an eye out for.

Didn’t think the little guys would find the food so quickly! Makes me doubly determined to plant some actual plant-type food sources for them soon.

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Hummingbirds http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/hummingbirds/ http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/hummingbirds/#comments Tue, 07 Apr 2009 23:32:00 +0000 Lisa Linderman http://www.halfacrehomestead.com/2009/04/hummingbirds/

A few days ago I was standing at the kitchen window and was surprised to see a hummingbird investigating the porch. The former house owners left a ton of cup hooks up on the roof part, so I’m thinking they might have had hummingbird feeders there at one point. Who am I to argue with a hummingbird? They are so much cooler than I ever thought about being!

Did you know that hummingbirds…
* have heartbeats up to 1,260 per minute, and take up to 250 breaths a minute
* consume half their weight in sugar daily
* eat small flying insects as well as nectar
* flap their wings 80 times per second
* can fly forwards, backwards, up, dow, sideways, and even upside down, at up to 60mph…but can’t walk

So today I went to the Backyard Bird Shop in town, to find a decent hummingbird feeder and potentially a dripper for my birdbath (another story.) I had no idea there were so many types of hummingbird feeders! I still think of them as the bulb-shaped containers filled with red liquid and with a little glass spout at the bottom, which attracted more bees and wasps than birds and was generally kind of a bust.

Apparently hummingbird feeders have come a long way since my childhood. They now are generally drip-free, as they are designed to allow the birds to perch and feed from above, instead of hover and feed from below. They may come with ant traps to deter ants from stealing the sugar water, and probably attract fewer bees because they don’t drip or leave sugar on the outside of the container as much as previous designs. It’s now also recommended that you clean your feeders weekly with vinegar and rinse in hot water.

After wishing I could afford to buy them all, I purchased a decorative, three “flowered” feeder with glass bulbs set into driftwood and topped with bright red tin “flowers” possessing yellow centers for feeding. I also purchased a window-attached feeder with two glass tubes with red caps wrapped up in copper wire and attached to a suction cup for sticking to a window.

The lady at the shop told me that hummingbirds are territorial, so it’s best to set stations up a fair distance apart. It wasn’t until after I was on my way home that I wondered, what then is the purpose of having two or three “flowers” on each feeder? Just for the bird’s entertainment? In case he brings a date?

One way to attract more of the little hummers into your yard, and thus have more visitors to your feeder, is to fill your garden with plants that hummingbirds happen to like. Since I’m looking at planting a new yard this spring, I have sheets on attracting various critters. For hummingbirds, attractive plants generally possess tubular flowers, in colors of red, orange, scarlet and gold.

Plants that attract hummingbirds include:
* (Perennials) Columbine, Foxglove, Fireweed, Bee Balm, Clarkia, Salvia, Trumpet Vine, Honeysuckle, Fuschia
* (Annuals)Petunia, Nasturtium, Red Salvia, Snapdragons, Scarlet Runner Beans
* (Shrubs/Trees)Butterfly Bush, Hardy Fuschia, Salal, Flowering Currant, Salmonberry

At checkout time, I noted that the shop was charging $4.00 for a small box of “nectar” powder. When I investigated, it was merely sucrose. Sugar. Fortunately, the gal at the counter also gave me a recipe for Homemade Hummingbird Nectar:

* Boil 2 cups of water for 1-2 minutes
* Remove from heat, add 1/2 cup white sugar
* Stir to dissolve, and allow to cool
* DO NOT add food coloring, or use Honey or Sugar Substitutes

Fill feeder with only as much nectar as will be consumed in 4 or 5 days (or fill to the top if you are willing to throw it out if unconsumed.) Store remaining solution in refrigerator for up to 2 weeks.

Take the feeder down, rinse with hot tap water and vinegar, and refill with nectar every 5 days at minimum (more in hot weather). Spoiled or moldy nectar can kill hummingbirds.

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