I Don’t Know the Song, but if You Hum a Few Bars…
Mar 26th, 2010 by Kathy
When creating your hummingbird garden, remember that you’re building a complete habitat for hummingbirds. While other birds will eat at your birdfeeders, and nest in nearby birdhouses, they’ll still spend most of their time scavenging in the wild. Hummingbirds, on the other hand, if conditions are right, may come to think of your backyard as their home, and even rely on your hospitality.
Putting yourself in that mindset will help you to choose all of the proper elements for your garden. For example, when selecting the flowers, besides making sure that they are brightly-colored, mainly tubular or trumpet-shaped, and heavy on nectar, you should also try to get varieties that bloom at different times of the year, so the hummingbirds will always have something to eat.
By the way, because they need protein as much as they need nectar, hummingbirds also eat small, soft bugs, such as gnats, spiders, mosquitoes, aphids, and caterpillars, along with insect eggs. In fact, the resourceful hummingbird will eat all of the bugs, including the spider, out of a web, then use the web in building its nest.
Therefore, one of the important points to keep in mind about your hummingbird garden – and it’s a very favorable one – is that it is low-maintenance. Not only do you not have to worry about killing bugs, as the birds will do that for you, but you absolutely must not even think about using any pesticides, because that will kill the birds. Hummingbirds also help with the upkeep by pollinating the flowers as they make their rounds.
Even though there will be all of those delicious flowers and delectable bugs around, you should still have some hummingbird feeders in your garden. This is advisable because, for one thing, no matter how carefully you try to coordinate the blooming times of your flowers, it is likely that there will be a dearth of nectar during certain periods. Furthermore, some hummingbirds are aggressive and territorial, and will take ownership of a flower, not letting any other birds go near it.
To keep these selfish birds (which should be ashamed of themselves) from monopolizing the feeders, you can either place them about 30 feet apart (the feeders, not the birds), or put a bunch of them together. Of course, hummingbirds do need some room to maneuver (that’s what gives them their ‘hum’), so even flowers should have some space between them. If you run lines between the feeders, you will also give the birds a place to perch.
Another good way to let the hummingbirds spread their wings is to have flowers in planters, and on trellises, arbors, pergolas, and gazebos. You can also put some in places that are slightly removed from the area of concentration, and even make a kind of flower trail that will lead them to feed a bit closer to your patio or porch. That way, you can enjoy their antics while eating at your picnic table, or sitting on your porch glider, outdoor sofa, or garden bench.
Creating a hummingbird garden is well worth the time and effort – especially since it doesn’t take a lot of time and effort, once it’s established. Moreover, it will also attract tons of butterflies, and, if you put regular birdfeeders in the vicinity, many other types of birds.
That way, when one bird sings a beautiful song, a hummingbird can hum along.
Yours Outdoors,
Kathy
I have a lot of different flowers that the hummingbirds like to visit but their favorite seems to be Blue Porterweed. They come back to it again and again throughout the day!