Subject: Communal Rufus Hummingbirds
Date: Apr 1 19:12:37 2003
From: Ruth Sullivan - godwit at worldnet.att.net


Hello Inga and tweeters,
We have both Anna's and Rufous Hummingbirds here in Fircrest on my feeders.Every evening we having seems all the Hummers feeding also on three feeders.I got my feeders all close to our patio since i have six Wild Current bushes and trees there can also feed on them.I also noticed that in the evening this Hummers feed longer.I timed it one time and it was close to three minutes this bird sitting on one perch.We having the immature Hummers and there feeding all together on one feeder.I dont think there feeding longer because of the lights,we tryred both ways,and it seems there is a cut off time where there all going to rest for the night.With that many hummers we having we would find one single bird still feedig,but not so.We keep a diary on my yardbirds and exspecial on the Hummingbirds The latest time in the evening was 6.15 pm.Today is different,it is cold and it rains there stayed only on the feeder to 5.00PM.'
Our newest bird what is going to breed in our yard is two Bushtits.What attracted Bushtits in our yard was the suet what most all of our birds feeding on.The two decided to stay and like to breed here,what is pretty exiting.

Cheers Ruth Sullivan
----- Original Message -----
From: Rolan Nelson
To: ingawh at yahoo.com ; tweeters at u.washington.edu
Sent: Tuesday, April 01, 2003 1:54 PM
Subject: Re: Communal Rufus Hummingbirds


Inga,

Back before I was a birder (so I can't tell you what kind they were) I used to hang out at a friend's ranch in rural Oregon where he had two feeders about 6 feet apart with a dowel between them. There were often 20 tp 30 hummers at a time sitting and/or feeding just outside his window, so I know it does happen.

-Rolan

Inga Holmquist <ingawh at yahoo.com> wrote:

Hello Tweeters!

Has anyone else seen behavior like this:

I have three hummingbird feeders (none within sight of each other) at my home in the hills outside of Orting, WA. I am almost overrun with hummingbirds at the moment. The male RUFUS HUMMINGBIRDS usually try to guard their chosen feeder from all other males (but may allow a female to drink with them.)

HOWEVER, last night, starting in the late dusk and continuing for about 10 - 15 minutes until it was nearly pitch-dark, I had up to 8 hummingbirds feeding at a time at one feeder, including 4 males together at the same time. Often two birds had their beaks in one tiny feeder-hole at the same time! (This is a small feeder!) This feeder is attached to my kitchen window, where the light was on and I could stand three feet away on the other side of the glass and get a perfect look.

This morning, they are back to their unsociable ways. Was it the fact that a cold night was coming on, and stoking up on calories was more important than territorial issues? Was the light what attracted them? (But still, what made them not quarrel?) Any other thoughts?

Thanks!



Inga Holmquist
P.O. Box 1141
Orting, WA 98360
ingawh at yahoo.com




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Rolan Nelson
Burley, WA
rnbuffle at yahoo.com




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