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I love hummingbirds. I’m used to putting out a feeder and filling it a few times during the spring and summer. I’m used to seeing one or two hummingbirds. Spotting a hummingbird at the feeder is a happy surprise, not something you see all the time or even every day. After moving in here, we started putting up feeders, our expectations not taking into account that we had built a house halfway up a hill in the middle of a forest.
Apparently, forests are filled with birds. Hunh.

After I posted a photo of my porch, someone emailed me about red dye being bad for hummingbirds. I researched a bit and discovered conflicting reports as to whether red dye is or isn’t bad for hummingbirds, but what is known as an absolute is that it isn’t necessary in order to attract them. But, this feed was already in the feeders, and for awhile, it wasn’t going anywhere fast so my new plan to use clear sugar water had to wait. Over the past couple of months, there was a hummingbird visitor here, another there. Just the usual.
Then suddenly there came a swarm, as if the woodland community had finally gotten the memo.

I felt like I was in the middle of a Hitchcock movie. There were, I’m not kidding, at least twenty hummingbirds, all at once.
What you don’t see in these photos are the hummingbirds that were swooping and divebombing my front porch as they made passes at the feeders, buzzing and zipping around me with their long, sharp beaks. I took my life in my hands to take these pictures.

They sucked the feeders dry in a matter of hours. And I can’t decide if I want to stop filling the feeders for awhile in hopes they’ll go away or if I’m too scared to stop filling them because I think they will kill me if they don’t get what they want.
“The Hummingbirds (2008) is a modern Hitchcock thriller/masterpiece, his first posthumous film with Universal Studios. It is the apocalyptic story of a remote West Virginia farm filled with an onslaught of seemingly unexplained, arbitrary and chaotic attacks of ordinary hummingbirds.”

If I’m found dead, the hummingbirds did it.
"It was a cold wintry day when I brought my children to live in rural West Virginia. The farmhouse was one hundred years old, there was already snow on the ground, and the heat was sparse-—as was the insulation. The floors weren’t even, either. My then-twelve-year-old son walked in the door and said, “You’ve brought us to this slanted little house to die." Keep reading our story....
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by BuckeyeGirl on November 20, 2009
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by BuckeyeGirl on November 20, 2009
by Leahld22 on November 20, 2009
by Pete on November 20, 2009
November 2009
"First it's glowing, then it's snowing! A pause, then screaming squalls and williwaws. Bright but bitter, then a thaw. Yet again it's cold and storming: What ever happened to global warming?"
Friday, Nov 20
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- Amy on How (Not) to Start a Fire in a Wood Stove
"Cookies are good." Read my barnyard stories....
Entire Contents © Copyright 2004-2009 SuzanneMcMinn.com. Text and photographs may not be published, broadcast, redistributed or aggregated without express permission. Thank you.
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-Kim A.
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They are darling little creatures though arent they?
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I would refill them…but maybe move them a little furher away from the house?
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Great pictures! And thanks, as always, for sharing. I love peeking in your window!
Toodles~
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Tresh in OKlahoma
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Great pics.
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:flying:
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Keep on feeding ‘em! I love the pictures!
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I’ll second Cathy J’s comment about a novel. One of my all-time favorite books (and movie) is The Egg and I. Your story is no less entertaining. I’d stand in line for a copy!
Oh, and the pie….my experience is that the empty pie pan is not returned to the fridge. Rather, the culprit eats from it while standing with the fridge door open. Just my recollection of life with teens. Your mileage may vary!
9:50
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Love the pictures.
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I hope I am not repeating what someone has already said above, because I don’t have time this am, to read the comments. We LOVE Hummingbirds. Ours really don’t come around here (northern LA) until after Jul 1st. So, ours are just showing up. They are VERY territorial – they fight. One will try and run off the others, so we want to get another feeder and you can’t put the feeders too close. My brother raises birds as a hobby. He said it is not the red water they are attracted to – it is the red on the feeder. Or, in other words, you don’t HAVE to use red water. We use sugar water – clear. Also, you have to change the water every 3rd day or so, or they won’t drink…
We got a feeder similar to yours, but it has a little platform where they can perch..sit awhile and drink.
I think Baltimores try and run them off and why the bigger birds do that, who knows – guess they want water too and can’t drink out of it. So, they need a diff. feeder. At least that is what my friend says, so is a big bird person, garden person…
My husband took photos like yours, with his zoom lens. They are so fascinating and their nests the size of a silver dollar. They remind ME of mini Woody Wood Peckers. LOL Or the Jestsons cartoon – zooming around. I think they stay here, until after a frost or two, before they fly off for winter in Mexico. Aren’t they adorable??????
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I have feeders, but I don’t get time to watch them.
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http://lifeislikechampagne.blogspot.com/
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The photos are wonderful- you did a great job. Now you just need to decide if you want to be a local tourist attraction.
K
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They used to fly right up to my face and hover when I was pregnant. I’ll never forget that. And my baby (oldest) turns ten in a few weeks. :birthday1:
Thanks for the pics.
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http://www.birdchick.com/2008/07/hummingbird-decline.html#comments
is the blog about the hummingbirds
OH, and she keeps bees, too…
12:44
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Have you noticed how they battle eachother? They really are mean little suckers for such pretty tiny birds.
Have fun and get some protective eye wear….
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If you don’t fill the feeder, they won’t come back. We had a feeder run dry one year while we were gone, and we lost one of the families that fed there, even after we refilled it.
And in the event of dive-bombing attacks, make sure Coco is at the TOP of the stairs with her heels kicked off.
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Suzanne, they are fantastic photos! My advice is…learn to duck.
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I have fed hummingbirds for years. I live in the west where we have numerous species of them.
I had two Annas Hummingbirds at my feeder all winter. I love to watch them.
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Maybe you could move the feeder to more out of the way place where you can see them, but you don’t need to walk by them. On the otherhand, I could see this being made into a very entertaining movie…so maybe you should leave it where it is.
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One roll she developed had a picture of an old truck tire. She was confused, to say the least, until I pointed out that there was a hummingbird perched on the tire. My father-in-law had grabbed my camera to catch the picture. Large tire, small hummingbird. It was the only hummingbird they saw that whole summer.
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I say fill ‘em up and watch the fun!
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I’d keep feeding them too, I’d even put up more feeders. We feed the birds a lot here (and the squirrels help themselves too)
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Blessings from Ohio…
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http://s324.photobucket.com/albums/k338/all4rum/?action=view¤t=hums003.flv