Like most of you I ask a lot of my flower garden. It
isn’t just a place that needs to look good all the time, especially when
friends drop by, it’s a place where I go to unwind, as well as too get my
spirit back, when I want to reach out to be touched by those of my past. I’m
not afraid to say that I’m lost without it.
So plainly put, I love my garden, never more so than in
spring, like now. Full of anticipation I just can’t wait for everything to get
going. Not only am I eager to see the first new pips of the perennials poke
their heads above the soil, or the first early flowers like the assorted crocus
and snowdrops, or the nearby witch hazels too make my early garden complete, I
am also eager to see my birds arrive. None more so than the first vibrantly colored
Baltimore Orioles or the ruby throat hummingbirds. The orioles I may only see
for a few precious days as they hurry through to get to their summer homes, while the
hummingbirds are with me all season, often by the dozens, so they get the most
of my attention.
With the help of websites such as www.learner.org and www.hummingbirds.net, you can not only
see when they first arrived in your area last spring, you can take your
interest one step further and see where they are this season.
After traveling thousands of miles from their winter
homes in the tropics, the hummingbirds for example usually start arriving back
into the lower states in early to mid-March, the warmer the spring the earlier
their arrival.
Counting on more than just their specialized feeders, I
learned long ago that by planting the flowers and shrubs around the house in an
effort to supply not only a food source, but also a safe place to nest. I was
shocked when an Audubon specialist friend of mine from Canada reminded me that
hummingbirds remember where they were last season and how to get back there.
The hummingbird has a hippocampus, the area in their
brain responsible for memory up to five times larger while being more
specialize than other birds which are much larger.
A few key things to keep in mind, hummingbirds are
sensitive to the color red, thus they are attracted to not only feeds full of
red colored sugar nectar, they are very attracted to flowers like the
dependable tall red Monarda, also known as the all summer flowering red
blooming bee balm. The other colors like the pink, white or lavender bee balm
do not attract hummingbirds. It’s also important to understand that the
hummingbird uses its specialized slender tongue in its specialized tube like
beak to take in both the nectar in the tubular flowers it visits, as well as
any small insects that it picks up on the way. Insects are of special
importance when they are nesting, as they go in search of high energy food for
their young.
To get started, Google the birds that your are interested
in to find out when they will be arriving in your garden and then with
everything in place, get ready to enjoy a phase of your garden that you never
thought possible. It’s easy.
Enjoy.
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