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- #11
...Sad pics.
Found a dead hummer.
Went out to watch the barnswallows zoom and a young one sat on the fence, watching me. Noticed a foot away, a hummer hanging off the fence, dead.
Had to get pics, as you never think you'd get this close to one, dead or alive. Plus, a bit educational to find out how tiny and light they really are.
They've recently grown to at least 5 of them, arguing over the feeder. I added a second further away to limit their fighting. Idk if this one was hurt or old or had something else going on. Feeders cleaned and replaced w/sugar water every 2-3 days.
That little ruffle on its back is where the tail meets the body. So very tiny!
...
do you have any plain water around for them that they can use? it would be interesting to see if on really hot days if they do use it.
they can fight just like many other creatures, they can also die of old age, it's so hard to know for sure at our level of sight and understanding unless you were an expert with the right equipment and ways to test.
i was just thinking a short while ago that every creature around us lives just as intensely at times as we do, but also surely has their times of not so intense. the ebb and flow of life. we're all soaking in it... until we're not...
yes so very tiny and living on the edge too as they have such high metabolisms at times.
That's sad about the hummingbird you found, secuono. I've always wondered about our electric fences back in the day, but doesn't a bird on a hot wire also need to touch a ground to complete the circuit? If so that wouldn't be impossible I guess. I'm surprised they still manufacture red insulators, given the outcry against these back in the 70s/80s.
Right now the population of hummers has swelled, I think because of migrant birds coming from Canada and northern parts of my state. All of them are engaged in a feeding frenzy, fueling up for the migration. I'm filling the feeder every couple days, and the patches of jewelweed I let grow up around the place are buzzing with the little birds, and also bumblebees who are becoming increasingly disoriented. In a few weeks all the ruby-throated hummingbirds will be gone, save for a few stragglers coming through, and the bee colonies will be collapsing, with frost killing the worker bees which is very sad. Rest in peace fuzzy bumblebees, and safe travels to my tiny hummingbirds.