Hum-azing .

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In all the years we’ve fed hummingbirds… 17 years in North Carolina and 21 years here…. we have never had more than two on a feeder at a time.

Ever.

They’re territorial little buggers and don’t usually tolerate companions when feeding. So when I snapped a picture of three hummers on the nectar together last week, I was thrilled and thought I’d seen something special.

And then yesterday I saw this…

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I have no idea why… but we are currently in the middle of a hummingbird population explosion.

Every day there’s a literal flock of the little darlings buzzing around our deck.

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I didn’t manage to capture a photo of the six, but I did get a few of these 5… which for me was an absolute delight.

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I don’t know what we’re doing right.. but I’m going to try and keep doing it.

👍

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27 thoughts on “Hum-azing .”

  1. How wonderful to be able to see them so close up and your love for nature is admirable.
    I wonder if it’s because of the fires in Canada that there are more of them where you are this year?

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Nor do we have them in Northern Canada, though I saw a few when I lived down South. Never many. A flock was an impossibility!
      Just talking thtough my baseball cap, Rg, but maybe a bunch got blown northwards by a hurticane wind, and now they are thriving in an environment without too many natural enemies.
      Keep up the good servicr.

      Liked by 2 people

  2. There does seem to be a hummingbird explosion everywhere. On my NextDoor feed (Arlington VA) people are posting amazing photos of LOTS and LOTS of hummingbirds…flocks of hummingbirds!

    Liked by 1 person

  3. Momma River is providing such a wonderful menu in her restaurant that it is becoming a “no-agreesion” haven for her patrons. Peace Bottle will be the talk oh the hummingbird population for years to come…

    Liked by 1 person

      1. Faith, girl, faith. If you can get some hummingbirds to sit long enough to eat, you can get more to do it.
        You can be the Peacebringer of hummingbird legends!

        Liked by 2 people

      1. I found it flopping around on a concreted floor in an external stairwell. It had gotten caught in a spider web and the web had wrapped itself around its tiny little legs. I went to pull off the web but it looked like, if I did, its legs were coming with it. Then, I remembered I had my trusty pocketknife. I gently sawed through the web and let it fly away…

        Liked by 1 person

  4. I’m lucky if I see one each summer here in Minnesota, but at the campground we stay at in Colorado they hang a huge feeder by the office cabin and dozens zip in and out of the nearby trees to feed and hide, feed and hide. It’s spectacular.

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