Hummingbirds Pictures - Keeping Your Hummingbird Paradise
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Picture source: Hummingbird ID Site
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One of the best ways to study and protect hummingbirds is to establish a feeding site. This will not only add romance to the area, but also keep the place safe from sugar-seeking insects like wasps and bees. Besides, they do a very good job when they pollinate flowers.
Feeders should be brightly colored, because vivid colors naturally attract hummingbirds. Feeders must be cleaned every day. They also should be equipped with bee guards (colorful plastic panels). In order to facilitate cleaning, it is better to buy compact detachable feeders.
If you seriously consider the task of hummingbird watching, there are a number of tips to remember on how to make your site more preferable among hummingbirds. Feeders should be placed in the vicinity of flowers and flowerbeds. During non-blooming periods, sugar water is good. But in this case, you must be careful not to forget to clean the plates every day.
Hummingbirds prefer tubular flowers, which are more convenient for them. It is better if flowerbeds are compact and there is enough distance between them to make them more noticeable for the birds. Red flowers are the most attractive for hummingbirds.
The garden should not be overcrowded with large trees, because that will block the sight of flowers and reduce the chance that many birds will arrive. Trees must be scarce and they should differ in height. Male hummingbirds may use taller trees as outposts for guarding the area where females are nesting or feeding.
Gladiolus, petunias, salvia, jasmine, begonia and honeysuckle so forth will definitely attract hummingbirds. Some flowering trees, like horse chestnut, black locust and fruit trees also draw them. There should be a variety of annual and perennial plants in order to provide your speedster acrobatic hummingbirds with enough inexhaustible sources of food for years to come.
Hummingbirds Pictures - Links
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Picture source: JungleWalk © 2002-2003 Netrikon Designs Inc, Junglewalk.com
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Attracting and Feeding Hummingbirds - If there are hummingbirds in your area... they're easy to attract by feeding.
Black-Chinned Hummingbirds - Description, range, predator and prey, and information on habits and habitat.
Care and Feeding of Hummingbirds - One of our most fascinating and handsome migrants, the Hummingbird is simple to attract to backyards. A few simple tips can improve a homeowner's chances of keeping these tiny birds around all summer.
Chimney Swift (Chaetura pelagica) - Provides photos, a sound file, and data on this bird's behavior and physical traits.
Creating a Hummingbird Haven - Information on the Hummingbird and how to attract them to the garden.
Dan True's Hummingbird Photos - Photos from the book "Hummingbirds of North America" and Hummingbird House kit.
Essortment.com - Find out about Hummingbirds! - Learn why they change colors, their feeding habits, and migration destination.
Florida's Hummingbirds - Agricultural department gives advice on how to construct an area attractive to the small birds. See the creature's flying tricks and features.
Hank Hogan's Hummingbird Photos - Close-up photographs and notes.
Hummingbird Cards - Send a Hummingbird postcard to a friend or family member. Card designs include photographs and watercolor paintings.
Hummingbird Flower Feeding Survey - Survey of hummingbird-worthy flowers based on personal experience.
Hummingbird Guide - The Hummingbird may be the smallest of birds, but it is also the most fascinating.
Hummingbird Identification - Detailed photos and notes of most U.S. hummingbird species, with illustrated glossary and side-by-side comparisons.
Hummingbird Scavenger Hunt - FAQs about the Hummingbird.
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Picture source: Hummingbird ID Site
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Hummingbird WebSite - Photo Gallery - Photographs by a large collection of artists and links.
Hummingbirds and Butterflies - This publication highlights key steps to protect and provide the important habitat areas needed by Hummingbirds and butterflies.
Hummingbirds and How to Attract Them with Artificial Feeders - Hummingbirds can be attracted to gardens by planting flowers preferred by hummingbirds or by hanging nectar filled hummingbird feeders.
Hummingbirds at WildBirds.com - In eastern North America, the Ruby-throated Hummingbird is the only hummingbird you will probably see. But in places like Arizona, you may see over a dozen species.
Hummingbirds in Houston - Plan to see the nectar-drinkers in this Texas city. Find out when they are active and what feeding solutions and plants they like.
Hummingbirds: Frantic and Fascinating - Article by Terry Dunn.
Hummingbirds--Attract Hummingbirds to Your Garden - Hummingbirds are garden jewels, as beautiful as they are valuable. Each weighing less than a nickel, Hummingbirds play an important role in the garden as pollinators and insect predators.
Jerry Blinn's Hummingbird Photos - High-quality images of a Rufous Hummingbird.
MSN Encarta - Hummingbirds - Overview of this bird provides a physical description and details on its unique flying capabilities. Find related resource links.
Portal Productions' Hummingbird Web Site - Select the name of a subspecies to view a picture and details about its distribution. For some birds, a map illustrates their locations.
Rufous Humming Bird - Description, distribution, and biology of the species.
SwiftWatch - Project to monitor the migration of the Chimney Swift (Chaetura pelagica).
The Hummingbird - It is hard to believe that birds are descended from dinosaurs especially the tiny Hummingbird. However, more and more scientists are beginning to believe that it is true.
Wildlife in My Backyard - Attracting Hummingbirds - Information on designing a garden, hummingbird behavior and the container gardening for hummers.
Winter Hummingbirds of Southwest Louisiana - Close-up photographs and notes by Hummingbird bander Dave Patton.
Winter Hummingbirds: On the Increase in the Eastern U.S.? - The number of winter hummingbird sightings east of the Rocky Mountains appears to have increased dramatically over the past decade, but it's hard to say whether there are actually more hummingbirds.
Zack Sessions's Hummingbird Photos - Close-up photos of Ruby-throated Hummingbirds at feeders.
Hummingbirds Pictures - Other Hummingbirds sites
Hummingbirds - Hummingbirds are called so for the sound that they produce during a flight. These are one of the most amazing birds on earth and are famous for their variety of colorations and speed of wings. It is believed that the species originated from insect-eating swift-like birds that inhabited the northern Andes Mountains of South America.
Nowadays, Hummingbirds are found in North, Central, and South America. The density is greater in areas that are closer to the equator. The Hummingbird inhabits almost all zones including tropical forests and deserts. Earlier, they were extensively hunted because of their feathers. Yet, people soon realized that there is a danger of extinction for this species. Nowadays, Hummingbirds are becoming well adapted to living near humans. However, about 9 species remain critically endangered.
Hummingbirds Pictures - Hummingbirds are enigmatic and wonderful creations of the world. They live in the western hemisphere. The image of the hummingbird was firmly imprinted in the minds of Indians and other Native American tribes, who believed that hummingbirds were sent to the earth by gods to guard people against evil spirits. Ancient Aztecs even believed that their most powerful god had come out of a hummingbird feather ball that had come down from the sky.
For modern people this miniature dashing speedster of a bird is also a wonder. The plumage has the remarkable property of changing color in various ways at various angulations of the falling sunlight. These are the only birds that can fly in uncountable numbers of manners. Have you ever seen a bird that can fly sideways, backwards, upwards or even upside down? They even have the ability to stay aloft in the air without moving in the space.
Hummingbirds Photos - Hummingbirds are believed to have appeared in northern Andes Mountains of South America. There are facts indicating that the hummingbird sprung from the swift, although not all scientists share this point of view. They live only in the western hemisphere and they mostly tend to concentrate in equatorial regions. However, hummingbirds occur in every part of the continental North America, except maybe within the polar areas.
Native American tribes viewed them as messengers of gods. They even ascribed the advent of a god to hummingbirds. Thus, Huitzilopochtli, one of the Aztec war gods, was believed to have magically come out of a hummingbird feather ball. Hummingbirds were also attached to the war god due to their aggressive behavior.