Any Hummingbird Watchers Out There?

Options
Jaytee
Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
edited December 2017 in Bonded by Breast Cancer

Anybody out there like me who loves to watch hummingbirds?

The hummingbirds.net website has posted their 2012 migration map that tracks the migration to the north.  Thought it might be fun if people would post when they see their first hummingbird.  I live up in Ohio so it will be a month or two before they come back here.  Would love to hear from any of you in the south as you see your first one. It will give me hope that spring is really coming!

http://www.hummingbirds.net/map.html

I love to watch that little world outside my window-----takes my mind off of my problems for a little while.

«13456721

Comments

  • mommarch
    mommarch Member Posts: 584
    edited March 2012

    I love hummingbirds.  We live in West Texas, so they should be here soon.  We have the Rufous come in in August and they are a hoot.  Will let you know when I see one. 

  • AnneW
    AnneW Member Posts: 4,050
    edited March 2012

    We don't get our first hummers till around Mother's Day (I live at 7000 feet.) I always put out a couple of feeders. We get Black Chinned and Broad Tails, and in July we get the aggressive but enjoyable Rufous for 3 short weeks.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited March 2012

    We get ruby throat and black chin here. March 15 is about when the first show up. I'll be putting feeders up this week.



    The 3 years of drought have really crimped my backyard bird variety, very excited that we are on track with rain this year so far.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited March 2012

    We mostly see the Ruby throats here ---I have been feeding them for years and last year I found my first nest!    It was in the corner of a taxus shrub.

    Love your screen name, Chickadee.  I have always told my kids that if I was a bird, I would be a chickadee!  Love those little guys too.    Hope you will get rain this year--felt so bad for you all in Texas last year.

    MaryB---I found that website a couple of years ago---love how they track the migration, think it would be fun for kids.

    Anne, I ususally see my first one around Mothers day too---though people in town will sometimes see them a week or so earlier than me.  We have a crabapple tree and when it blooms that seems to be when I will see my first one.

     On another bird note------I went walking on a bike path a few weeks ago and saw my first Kingfisher!  Stood and watched him for a minute or two---he gave me a show, dived straight down into the creek and came out so fast I couldnt see if he got his prize or not!    My teenage daughter tells me not to become a crazy bird lady----but its too late----Smile

    Off to work----see you all later!

  • Kicks
    Kicks Member Posts: 4,131
    edited March 2012

    When we lived on Whidbey Island (WA) I had gobs of them come. First few years we lived here (western SD) I put out feeders for them but never saw a one so quit as ony bees came. Thought they were supposed to come.

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited March 2012

    When I lived in Maryland my neighbor had hammers but they never came to my feeder. Never figured what I was doing wrong.



    I do get frustrated when the bees take over.

  • Blessings2011
    Blessings2011 Member Posts: 4,276
    edited March 2012

    Oh, I LOVE my hummers!

    I keep my feeders (I have four) freshly cleaned and filled each week, and we have hummers year-round.

    They're pretty tame - they always hover over my shoulder as I put up the newly-filled feeders.

    One time, on my front porch, I saw 8 hummers just sitting and feeding nicely (must have been girls! Wink ) on the front feeder.

    They're all pretty laid back. They sit and feed; they don't hover and flit away, unless the  males are trying out their "Top Gun" maneuvers, and fly all around the place chasing each other.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited March 2012

    Chickadee------the neighbor must have been making her nectar extra sugary or something!  I don't like the bees either but they dont seem to be too much trouble until later in the summer for me in Ohio. 

    Blessings-----how neat to be able to have hummers all year!   I am so sad in the fall when they finally leave.  I always keep at least one feeder up for quite awhile just for the last stragglers that come by---

  • bak94
    bak94 Member Posts: 1,846
    edited March 2012

    We have them year round. We have to make sure the feeders stay unfrozen in the winter. Good thing we do not get much freezing weather!

    Blessings, they are pretty tame here too! Buzzing around my head! They get very territorial about their feeders. My husband will sit out on the porch with a camera and take lots of photos of them.

  • inmate4232010
    inmate4232010 Member Posts: 310
    edited March 2012

    i'm with bak94...we get them all year round.  annas and roufus are the only ones i've seen in my yard (5 years in house).  mine are fairly tame and will hover in my face sometimes as if to try and tell me something.  my feeder is just outside my kitchen window so i can see them often.

  • lvtwoqlt
    lvtwoqlt Member Posts: 6,162
    edited March 2012

    I have put up feeders in the past, I will be putting mine up this week. I think they arrive here around the 15 of March. One year when I had 3 feeders up, my husband was sitting on the front porch when a hummer flew at him and stopped about 6 inches from his nose, hovered there a minute then flew over the top of his head. I will sit in the living room watching for their antics chasing one another away from the feeders.

    Sheila 

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited March 2012

    Those west coast hummers are laid back. Here in Texas, no 2nd hummer dare feed at the same feeder or the kamikaze battle is on. On my back deck I often see a male sitting on a branch guarding his feeder. I love the swooping, wide open tail feather fights that go on.

  • voraciousreader
    voraciousreader Member Posts: 7,496
    edited March 2012

    I have a feeder in a tree facing my front porch... It attracts your garden variety birds. However, I also have hanging fuchsia plants on the porch and the hummingbirds LOVE the fushia! I live on long island and will let you know when they arrive on my front porch!

  • coraleliz
    coraleliz Member Posts: 1,523
    edited March 2012

    I have the Anna's Humingbird year round. The Rufous & the Costas should be arriving soon. The only use I have for sugar these days is to make nectar for them. I buy a 10lb bag at Costco & it last me about a month. This winter the hummers were cooperative. Sometimes 2 sitting on a perch. But right now there is a male the is being very territorial & chasing all the others away.

  • Anonymous
    Anonymous Member Posts: 1,376
    edited March 2012

    Oh, I love this thread!  It's so funny that it popped up for me tonight since I just put out my first feeders this afternoon. 

    It's a little early for us still...they usually start showing up the 3rd week of March and I saw my first ones in mid-April last year...but I'll be gone for 3 weeks for my surgery starting next week and I wanted to get my hubby in the habit of changing the feeder food so they don't pass us by. 

    I've been putting out two feeders for the last 5 years and I always get 3-5 regulars.  I'm going to add a third feeder this year.  They are all in sight of at least one of my windows.  Usually, I always have one who likes to perch on the line that runs from the porch roof to the house...it's our "cat run" (we put her in a harness and let her roam on the leash running off the line when we're out there gardening or sunning).  I've had the more brazen hummers come right up to the cat (within a couple of feet) and check her out. 

    One of the great joys of life is watching those little hummers.  My garden is constantly undergoing reconstruction so I have the most attracting plants I can find out there.  = )

  • Likeachickadee
    Likeachickadee Member Posts: 116
    edited March 2012

    I love watching the hummingbird wars!  I get Ruby Throats and had 2 feeders on my balcony.  Was always amazed at the kamakazee manuevers to protect the nectar.....I wish they would just share as there was plenty for everyone!

    How great to those who have them year round.  Mine make the long trip to Mexico in September to return in the spring.

  • coraleliz
    coraleliz Member Posts: 1,523
    edited March 2012

    Hummingbird wars??? Here's how it's sometimes played in my neighborhood. If the birds are ignoring your feeders & frequenting your neighbors, you have to make your nectar sweeter(add more sugar). But then your neighbor might retaliate & make his stronger. But honestly, there are so many hummers year round that I can't keep my feeders filled. I use a 4 to 1 ratio.

  • FilterLady
    FilterLady Member Posts: 407
    edited March 2012

    I love those hummers.  I usually have 6 feeders and sometimes they look like a hive of bees buzzing.  They are so funny to watch and my grandbabies just love them too.

    I'm going to clean and fill my feeders tomorrow since we usually get our first ones around the 3rd week of March.  I take them down around December if I haven't seen one in a while but there have been times I've left at least one up year round! Smile

  • ZingersMom
    ZingersMom Member Posts: 2
    edited March 2012

    I love hummers!  I spent 10 years in the St. Louis area with two hummer feeders, flower plantings attractive to hummers and great success in attracting the ruby throateds common to midwestern states.  I'm now in NE Indiana.  Didn't do much birding while dealing with breast cancer treatment but have recently re-established some feeding stations and had just checked the hummingbird migration site a couple of days ago.  I'm guessing we'll see them in a few weeks, as well.  I can't wait!  Oh, and I'll be adding some hummingbird attracting plants to my landscaping this spring.

  • suemed8749
    suemed8749 Member Posts: 1,151
    edited March 2012

    Great thread! Thanks, Jaytee. We have hummers year-round here in Phoenix, and I see a lot of them in my yard and out in the desert when I'm hiking. Yesterday, a gorgeous hummer entertained me on the trail for about 5 minutes. Last summer, one made a nest several feet from our front door. She was such a diligent mama, and we left her alone as much as possible, but the egg never hatched. Hope she tries again. I liked Ysa's post about the "cat run" - I've seen hummers who are, I swear, hovering over our cat and teasing him.

    I've never posted pictures, but maybe I'll try to post a picture of our nesting mama.

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited March 2012

    I'd love to see any pictures that you have!   Has anyone ever had one land on their hand?  I have tried but havent been successful yet.   I can't wait til it warms up here and I can plant some of my favorite hummingbird attracting plants.  I always have to plant some lantanas and 2 different salvias, one called 'Autumn Cherry Chief' and the other one called 'Black and Blue'(also called Hummingbird Sage). They do seem to love those, just wish they were winter hardy around here.

  • YramAL
    YramAL Member Posts: 1,651
    edited March 2012

    I'm going to add this thread to my favorites! I just got my first hummingbird feeder as a gift from my dad and I'm waiting for our Pacific Northwest rainstorms to go away for awhile to hang it up. My dad says he gets lots of hummingbirds at his feeders. We'll see if I am as lucky.

    Mary 

  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited March 2012

    Good luck......hope you will get some of the little cuties soon.  It took me a little while to get them attracted to my feeder, but then they were coming and I just kept adding more feeders to keep them happy and not fighting with each other.  There is a certain point in the summer when it seems like all the young ones are out of the nests and they are just buzzing everywhere, dipping and diving, doing their little mating dance, its a regular circus right outside my window!  

  • Ossa
    Ossa Member Posts: 919
    edited March 2012
    Hummingbirds in our yard last year.. First one of the year showed up two days ago.. Went straight to where feeder hangs.. Had to quickly make some nectar and hang feeder in place
  • Jaytee
    Jaytee Member Posts: 1,211
    edited March 2012

    It is so amazing how they come back to the same place every year.  Now I am more anxious than ever to see my first one! 

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited March 2012

    Made up my sugar water and put up two feeders. Keeping the camera handy.

  • ElenaMarie62
    ElenaMarie62 Member Posts: 105
    edited March 2012

    Hi Everyone,

    I am in Maryland, and it has been so warm here, that I just made up a batch of sugar water tonight, and will put it out tomorrow in one feeder at least. Same spot it was in when they left in the Fall. They may head up this way sooner than I think, so I don't want them to pass on by. :) 

  • ElenaMarie62
    ElenaMarie62 Member Posts: 105
    edited March 2012

    Hi Ossa, where did you get your really cool feeders? They are nice because they have no yellow on them. That was what drew the bees to one of my feeders last year, the yellow flower part around the little feeder holes. I like the Hummzingers too, they are easy to clean and bees have a harder time figuring out how to get into them.

  • lioness1111
    lioness1111 Member Posts: 19
    edited March 2012

    Jaytee

    Oh Yeah!!!!  Thanks for bringing this up!!   I take so much comfort from our hummers.  When I am feeling bad, they come up to the sliding glass door and flash their red throats to say hello.  We live in OR, and they stayed around our feeder all winter.   Usually just the Annas winter over, but we had a mild winter and the ruby ones stuck around this year.  A few weeks ago they disappeared and we were so disappointed.   Now they are back, and chowing down at the feeder.  Think they must have been nesting.   Today we had a late snowfall, and the first thing I saw this morning was the male just hanging out on the feeder.   Sometimes it's hard to recognize our everyday joy and blessings, but these exquisite creatures are right there reminding us!

  • Chickadee
    Chickadee Member Posts: 4,467
    edited March 2012

    Anyone ever visited the Desert Museum outside Tucson? They have a hummer habitat with all kinds. They flit all around you. It's heaven.

Categories