I had one of those jewels of the bird world visit my
geranium last week – yes, a hummingbird. As I do every summer, I started out
early with a brightly colored feeder filled with the sweetest of sugar water.
And, as they do almost every summer: they ignored it. But they do something
else every summer, at least in my yard: they visit the nectar-bearing flowers.
They are most noticeable when the hostas are blooming in August. But I have
also seen them on my zinnias, which I knew attracted butterflies, but I had
never noticed a hummingbird on them before.
One thing that struck me about the hummingbird’s attraction
to the hosta flowers, is that those flowers are white, not red, like most of
the hummingbird feeder and feed mixes available. It turns out that hummingbirds
are more interested in the sweetness of the nectar than they are in the color
of the flower.
I think everyone who attracts hummingbirds counts themselves
lucky. If you want to attract them with flowers keep these guidelines in mind:
the sweeter the flower the better; tubular shaped flowers are best for
hummingbirds; and you should provide flowers that bloom over a long period of
time. You can accomplish this by providing a succession of blooms from spring
through fall. For a list of flowers that should do the trick,
Birdsandblooms.com/hummingbirds has some useful information including pictures
of the flowers they recommend.
Besides nectar, hummingbirds also eat insects, favoring
those that are minute enough to be swallowed whole. They have been observed
hovering at the bark of a tree, hunting for those tiny spiders and insects.
Researchers in Michigan counted ruby-throated hummingbirds as the primary
visitors to the small pits that yellow-bellied sapsuckers had drilled into
trees to capture sap. The hummers ate the sap as well as the insects they found
that were also attracted to the sap.
It is generally accepted that hummingbirds originated in the
equatorial belt region across South America. That is where the greatest number
of species has been found. Of the 320 species of hummingbirds known, more than
half live in that region, with diminishing numbers of species found as you move
north and south of the equator. Costa Rica supports 54 species, Mexico has 51
species, western North America has 12, and eastern North America has only one:
the ruby-throated.
The ruby-throated hummingbird breeds as far north as
southern Canada, and may winter as far south as Panama. When they migrate
across the Gulf of Mexico, it requires them to make a continuous flight of more
than 500 miles. How long would that take, you wonder? Thanks to studies
conducted by Crawford Greenewalt we know that the top speed of a female ruby-throat
is 27 miles per hour. So, at top speeds, this leg of the journey would take
over eighteen hours!
How lovely for us to have this one unique, feathered jewel
of summer, to bring their special beauty to our gardens.