Pages
▼
Ruby-throated Hummingbird
Can you find the Ruby-throated Hummingbird in this photo?
I watched him fly through Myrtle Glen, sipping nectar from the flowers and when he finally perched on the branch he let me get close to take some pictures.
This year we have two male Ruby-throated Hummingbirds chasing each other, and several females zipping around. They are very vocal and aggressive towards each other, guarding a flowering plant they claim for themselves against all other hummers, even butterflies and large bumblebees.
Males have bright read colored throat, females are grayish in color.
Wings beating about 53 times per second create the hum.
The birds are flying acrobats, they can hover, fly upside down and backwards. This takes up a lot of energy and their high metabolism requires them to eat up to twice their body weight in food each day. On the menu are insects, spiders, flower nectar and sap.
In Fall they migrate to Mexico and Central America but breed here in the eastern half of North America. Males establish a territory and court the females with flying acrobatics, doing loopings in the sky. Females may have several broods laying 1 to 3 eggs each time.
We do not offer sugar water in feeders since the birds prefer the flowers.
Here is a list of flowers the Hummingbirds love to visit, they do prefer red flowers, and visit those first, to then go on the pinks, orange, purple and blue
Pineapple Sage
red Bottlebrush blooms
Coral Honeysuckle
the flowers on my Bromeliad Portea petropolitana
Abution
Shrimp Plant
Spiral Ginger
red Pentas
pink Porterweed
Bat faced cuphea
Candy Corn (Cigar Plant)
purple Porterweed
Iochroma, purple bell-shaped flowers
Passionflower
Morning Glories
different Salvias and Sage
Aloe flowers
I don't put any hummingbird feeders out either. They seem to be happy enough with the flowers in my garden. They like hyssops a lot, too.
ReplyDelete