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The First Hummingbird and Happy Easter
Just wanted to wish all a very Happy Easter Holiday!
It saddens me to see that many agricultural-type stores still sell baby chicks and rabbits at Easter. While buying some seed for my many wild bird feeders the other day, I couldn’t help but look in the metal water trough where the chicks were contained. What about the sickly one? Would he make it? Did anyone even care? I found it repulsive, and told the manager about the sick bird, then left the establishment to purchase birdseed elsewhere.
On a much happier note, the first hummingbird was spotted at my feeder yesterday! He must be tired from the long journey, and happy to have found his old feeder ready and waiting on him. Last summer I had two leaf misters set out, and the hummingbirds absolutely loved them. They would play and flit around everyday in the fine mist. I wonder if he was looking for that too? Not quite warm enough yet in Atlanta for that.
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One Funky Wild Bird Feeder
Meet Hot Lips Hilda, she is modeled after the iconic 1950’s diner waitress, with her beehive hairdo and cat eye glasses. She’s one of the funkiest wild bird feeders I’ve ever seen…just look at that face! Hand crafted in Maine of stoneware pottery, she withstands the elements perfectly. It’s really a trip to watch birds perched on her tongue eating, like it’s the most natural thing in the world.
Hilda works best with sunflower seed, and the design keeps seed sheltered from rain. She holds about 2 lbs. of seed, and her color will never fade. Wild bird feeders make excellent, and lasting gifts too for any nature lover on your list. Mother’s Day is not far away…think wild bird feeders!
- Bird Accessories, Bird Feeders, Hummingbird Feeders, Misters and Birdbath Drippers, Uncategorized, Wild Bird Feeders
Now is the Time for Hummingbird Feeders
If you’re wanting to attract hummingbirds this spring, now is the time to get your feeders ready. Hummingbirds are the most anticipated spring arrival of all wild birds, as they’re just remarkable beings of nature. So tiny, yet so brave, they’ll buzz closely when you hang your feeder. With amazing flight abilities, they’ll hover, fly forward and backwards, and even upside down!
It’s fairly easy to attract hummingbirds, even for beginners, with these easy tips:
Be sure to hang your feeders early. Hummingbirds first arriving in spring are hungry from their long migration out of Central and South America and Mexico. Natural food sources (insects and nectar from flowers) are in short supply at this time of year, making stops at your hummingbird feeder more favorable. Early April is best for southern states, while early May is best for the northern states.
Keep Nectar Fresh. Many hummingbird mixes are available for convenience, but it’s pretty easy to make your own too. Using 4 parts water to 1 part white table sugar-you can boil the water to dissolve sugar quickly and completely. Don’t ever use dyes, or any other ingredient, as it will likely be fatal. Hang feeders in the shade if possible, but still in easy view, and change the solution at 4 day intervals-minimum. Don’t let the sugar water sit too long as it spoils quickly in warmer weather.
Plant Hummer-Friendly Flowers. Red is always best, but hummingbirds know where the nectar can be found. Impatients are always a good choice, as are petunias, salvia, and geraniums. Trumpet vine and honeysuckle are adored by hummers too, but will not bloom until later in the season.
Add Moving Water to your garden. With the addition of a dripper in your bird bath, or a leaf mister set in the yard, you’ll be surprised just how much hummingbird activity will be seen. To bathe, drink, and play in the water is a much loved activity of the tiny jewel!
Please hang feeders high enough so that ground predators (cats) will not have an easy target.