User Panel
Posted: 7/7/2023 7:53:46 PM EDT
Those little birds are a hoot to watch, their movements are crazy quick. I'm easily entertained.
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They are great fun, aggressive too. My bottle brush tree is dying, shame because they loved it and it was a great place to sit.
It’s funny when the tough ones will square off against you. |
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I have a hummingbird feeder. Have fed them for years. The same ones come back every year. It is pretty awesome.
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Quoted: They don't sit for long. Fuckers burn some energy that's for sure. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: They are great fun, aggressive too. My bottle brush tree is dying, shame because they loved it and it was a great place to sit. It’s funny when the tough ones will square off against you. They don't sit for long. Fuckers burn some energy that's for sure. Yep they're fascinating animals. They go into a type of hibernation to sleep. Due to their metabolism they're within less than a day of starving to death at all times. |
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DSC_7490-Perch2 by FredMan, on Flickr
DSC_8585-Hover by FredMan, on Flickr Hummer Hover Wings Forward by FredMan, on Flickr Female Ruby-throated Landing by FredMan, on Flickr Singing In The Rain by FredMan, on Flickr Hover by FredMan, on Flickr |
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Yep, they are fun to watch.
My feeder not only attracts Hummingbirds, but it also seems to attract Ladderback Woodpeckers... Attached File Attached File |
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Quoted: https://live.staticflickr.com/7369/27459155561_9fea4eb50e_b.jpgDSC_7490-Perch2 by FredMan, on Flickr https://live.staticflickr.com/7403/27602757285_738b46f118_b.jpgDSC_8585-Hover by FredMan, on Flickr https://live.staticflickr.com/4214/35239391731_1a07c1dec6_b.jpgHummer Hover Wings Forward by FredMan, on Flickr https://live.staticflickr.com/953/41762864681_75746fe757_b.jpgFemale Ruby-throated Landing by FredMan, on Flickr https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/48031550463_84a9135858_b.jpgSinging In The Rain by FredMan, on Flickr https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49981568666_808926f5dd_b.jpgHover by FredMan, on Flickr View Quote Awesome pics, thank you. The birds here are mostly black and not real colorful but still beautiful. |
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Dumb as a box of rocks
I swear they’re sexually attracted to fire Fun to watch though! |
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Quoted: I love the hummingbirds that hang around my feeders. There's one that will sometimes perch on my shoulder while I'm watering down my trees. The coolest creatures in back yard are these guys. https://www.farmersalmanac.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/hummingbird-moth-AdobeStock_271173842-944x630.jpeg View Quote |
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We normally have a couple dozen of them but this year we only have 2 birds
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The last few years we've had as many as five different ones. This year only one has come by a few times.
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Only feed them white sugar. 1 part sugar to 4 parts water. Boil to dissolve the sugar.
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I live in central Wa. state; what is the best feeder and feed to buy?
Thank you. |
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I like watching them fight over the feeders. 3 feeders yet they still fight like little fighter Jets over them.
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Some of my favorite animals in the universe. A miracle of nature.
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Quoted: I believe that is not a hummingbird but rather a moth View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I love the hummingbirds that hang around my feeders. There's one that will sometimes perch on my shoulder while I'm watering down my trees. The coolest creatures in back yard are these guys. https://www.farmersalmanac.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/hummingbird-moth-AdobeStock_271173842-944x630.jpeg You are correct |
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Hummingbirds are very cool, but…
Sweat bees are the drone of nature |
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Quoted: I love the hummingbirds that hang around my feeders. There's one that will sometimes perch on my shoulder while I'm watering down my trees. The coolest creatures in back yard are these guys. https://www.farmersalmanac.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/hummingbird-moth-AdobeStock_271173842-944x630.jpeg View Quote Those things are cool. Had a ton of them a few years ago and never saw another one since. |
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I have Calliopes, fun little buggers. They will come find me when they get here in the spring and chew my ass for not having the feeder up yet.
Attached File |
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Quoted: Yep, they are fun to watch. My feeder not only attracts Hummingbirds, but it also seems to attract Ladderback Woodpeckers... https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/20962/Hummingbird_jpg-2877408.JPG https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/20962/Ladderback_2022-02-26_0011_jpg-2877409.JPG View Quote This year, I learned they also attract Orioles. Damn thing flew up, landed, looking exactly like the ball cap, and causing the whole feeder to list 30 degrees... Hummingbirds are hilarious. Tiny balls of feathers and HATE. It's like watching a live-action version of the video game Joust, mixed with a Norris playoff hockey game. They hit each other with an audible "clack!" Story time. I bought a jack fruit from H-Mart. Which will make your entire place smell like Juicy-Fruit gum as it ripens. Ended up taking some of the sweet seed covers/pulp and making daiquiries with them. We had a hummingbird feeder hanging at one end of our balcony. I sat at the other, with my jackfruit daiquiri and watched the airshow. Evidently, jack fruit smells like the best thing ever to a hummingbird. More than one flew up to my glass, saw me, freaked out, and zoomed away chirping angrily. All of ours left after May. They'll be back in August/September. We've a couple of orange blossoming vines crawling high up the pine trees across from our current place. When I see hummers flitting among them, I'll refill the feeder and watch the show. |
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Hummingbird Pool Party Number Five – LONG VERSION! |
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Quoted: They are great fun, aggressive too. My bottle brush tree is dying, shame because they loved it and it was a great place to sit. It’s funny when the tough ones will square off against you. View Quote Imagine how fucking scary they would be if they had a 6 foot wingspan. What round for mutant humming bird? |
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Quoted: I have Calliopes, fun little buggers. They will come find me when they get here in the spring and chew my ass for not having the feeder up yet. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/27773/IMG_0452_jpeg-2877505.JPG View Quote The part where they fly up to your patio window, and start looking inside as they fly up, over, down, chirping the entire time...is rather bossy. Damn though, can a pack deplete a feeder quickly. Good thing we both work from home. |
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My hummers were two months late this year and I was concerned. They are here now though and the hummingbird fights are entertaining.
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Walela (hummingbird) is part of many important stories in our tribe: https://www.firstpeople.us/FP-Html-Legends/HummingbirdBringsBackTobacco-Cherokee.html
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I had to paint my garage door pulls from red to black because they kept on coming in, thinking they were getting a snack. Sad to watch a small swarm of hornets trying to get out, but they always figured it out. Are they nature's drones? |
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Quoted: I live in central Wa. state; what is the best feeder and feed to buy? Thank you. View Quote Whatever feeder- for summer, 1 part sugar to 4 parts water as already mentioned. I don’t think central WA has them in the winter, but they stick around the coast and west side. When it is well below freezing it can be some work to keep feeders going, they really need the help then. Crazy to see them in the snow and ice, we did not have the same species around when I was a kid, with feeders they have decided to stick around all year now. The Anna’s are the ones that stick around, the Rufous ones still migrate in and out. |
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I’ve got a few feeders, and it’s always fun watching different ones fighting with each other over them.
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Quoted: I believe that is not a hummingbird but rather a moth View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: I love the hummingbirds that hang around my feeders. There's one that will sometimes perch on my shoulder while I'm watering down my trees. The coolest creatures in back yard are these guys. https://www.farmersalmanac.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/11/hummingbird-moth-AdobeStock_271173842-944x630.jpeg Possibly a Sphinx Moth. They're called Hawaiian hummingbirds here as thats the closest thing we have to the real thing. Come out near sunset to pollinate the rarer native plants and move just like hummingbirds but only an inch and a half or so in body length. |
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Quoted: They are great fun, aggressive too. My bottle brush tree is dying, shame because they loved it and it was a great place to sit. It’s funny when the tough ones will square off against you. View Quote Put up a couple of feeders, you can have them literally eating out of one held in your hand in a matter of days. We have a half dozen birds in our yard every summer drinking from feeders my wife puts on the patio. Don't hesitate putting them close, the birds don't care. |
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I finally heard some this morning. Grabbed a feeder at lunch today.
Watching them is far more entertaining than television. |
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Quoted: I have Calliopes, fun little buggers. They will come find me when they get here in the spring and chew my ass for not having the feeder up yet. https://www.ar15.com/media/mediaFiles/27773/IMG_0452_jpeg-2877505.JPG View Quote |
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I got buzzed by a hummingbird at 13000ft in Wyoming. That was weird.
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Quoted: Only feed them white sugar. 1 part sugar to 4 parts water. Boil to dissolve the sugar. View Quote And change the feed often. They aren’t the fans of fermented drink that we are and it hurts them. 2-3 days here in the summer heat. Blue Jays will kill them. They chase them around in the live oak trees here. Eliminating Blue Jays gives you more hummingbirds. |
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Quoted: And change the feed often. They aren’t the fans of fermented drink that we are and it hurts them. 2-3 days here in the summer heat. Blue Jays will kill them. They chase them around in the live oak trees here. Eliminating Blue Jays gives you more hummingbirds. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Only feed them white sugar. 1 part sugar to 4 parts water. Boil to dissolve the sugar. And change the feed often. They aren’t the fans of fermented drink that we are and it hurts them. 2-3 days here in the summer heat. Blue Jays will kill them. They chase them around in the live oak trees here. Eliminating Blue Jays gives you more hummingbirds. I leave em both be. Let nature sort itself out. Watching Blue Jay's protect fledglings with multiple over watch shifts is cool. |
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I freaked out one year. Two were fighting, one impaled the other through its abdomen… they fell on the ground… I went over to see, its beak was all the way through the others body. As I reached down, the aggressor flew off. The other one shook his body & flew off. It stayed in our yard, coming back for, many years. You could see the scars on his belly. He’d fly by me, & pull the hair on top of my head, whenever the feeder was getting low.
We get, ruby throats, Anna’s, broad-billed, ring neck and some with golden chests. Most migrate, Anna’s generally stay all year, here in AZ….. unless we have a cold winter. If they disappear in November, I usually expect freezing temperatures in December and January. During mating season, they actually fly up extremely high, then, swoop straight down to the ground, breaking the sound barrier, with a high pitch chirp. Amazing to watch. |
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Quoted: During mating season, they actually fly up extremely high, then, swoop straight down to the ground, breaking the sound barrier, with a high pitch chirp. Amazing to watch. View Quote Attached File |
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Hummingbird Time Lapse |
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Quoted: During mating season, they actually fly up extremely high, then, swoop straight down to the ground, breaking the sound barrier, with a high pitch chirp. Amazing to watch. View Quote No. Hummingbirds aren't breaking the sound barrier. And no, not even with their wing tips. And more no, because it's not even close. |
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View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: During mating season, they actually fly up extremely high, then, swoop straight down to the ground, breaking the sound barrier, with a high pitch chirp. Amazing to watch. /media/mediaFiles/sharedAlbum/dont_believe_you_anchorman_zps267e5cbb_GIF-108.gif Well…. it certainly “sounds” like it does… Here’s Wiki’s explanation…. Courtship dives When courting, the male Anna's hummingbird ascends some 35 m (115 ft) above a female, before diving at a speed of 27 m/s (89 ft/s), equal to 385 body lengths/sec – producing a high-pitched sound near the female at the nadir of the dive.[159] This downward acceleration during a dive is the highest reported for any vertebrate undergoing a voluntary aerial maneuver; in addition to acceleration, the speed relative to body length is the highest known for any vertebrate. For instance, it is about twice the diving speed of peregrine falcons in pursuit of prey.[159] At maximum descent speed, about 10 g of gravitational force occur in the courting hummingbird during a dive (Note: G-force is generated as the bird pulls out of the dive).[159][a] The outer tail feathers of male Anna's (Calypte anna) and Selasphorus hummingbirds (e.g., Allen's, calliope) vibrate during courtship display dives and produce an audible chirp caused by aeroelastic flutter.[161][162] Hummingbirds cannot make the courtship dive sound when missing their outer tail feathers, and those same feathers could produce the dive sound in a wind tunnel.[161] The bird can sing at the same frequency as the tail-feather chirp, but its small syrinx is not capable of the same volume.[163] The sound is caused by the aerodynamics of rapid air flow past tail feathers, causing them to flutter in a vibration, which produces the high-pitched sound of a courtship dive.[161][164] Many other species of hummingbirds also produce sounds with their wings or tails while flying, hovering, or diving, including the wings of the calliope hummingbird,[165] broad-tailed hummingbird, rufous hummingbird, Allen's hummingbird, and the streamertail species, as well as the tail of the Costa's hummingbird and the black-chinned hummingbird, and a number of related species.[166] The harmonics of sounds during courtship dives vary across species of hummingbirds.[162] |
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