Showing posts with label feeding hummingbirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label feeding hummingbirds. Show all posts

Friday, October 7, 2011

Cwaizy Wabbit Jumps the Fence

After a hectic week - I came home and found lots of fresh veggies planted in different garden areas, thanks to my sweet hubby. It's a fun adventure every time I go out to find what's gone in today.

Newly planted tomato, eggplant, and
peppers among existing basils - this is
only one side of this raised bed garden.
New tomato, eggplant and peppers have been added to our super duper raised bed garden. Another garden area is full of zucchini plants and yet another area has cucumber plants - I'm amazed at how quickly everything grows once it's in the ground. We'll have our beans, broccoli, cauliflower and romanesquo plants ready for garden planting this week.

Butterfly Garden

Well the Cwaizy Wabbit has jumped the fence. The plants always look greener on the other side so our cross-eyed wabbitt has found a new place to watch over.

The Cwaizy Wabbit (CW) moved to the newly planted and mulched
hummer/butterfly garden. Can you see CW under a bush?
Porterweed, lantana, blue mist flower,
Mexican honeysuckle, Pato de Chivo and more butterfly
hummingbird attracting plants are here. I'm still discovering
something new every time I go out to check it.

Hummer taking a break amongst Red Porterweed shrubs.

Due to some family emergencies, the hummingbird feeder didn't get refilled this week. The hummingbirds are still helping themselves to the porterweed blooms and other flowering shrubs though and seem quite content.

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Modern Day Joyas Voladoras

Photographs of Ruby-Throated Hummingbirds courtesy of Marylyn Ponder.

According to website howstuffworks.com/hummingbird

When early Spanish explorers first encountered hummingbirds in the New World, they called them joyas voladoras--or "flying jewels."

As a social media newbie, my gardener friend Marylyn Ponder advised me the steps to take to get these “flying jewel” hummingbirds to SHARE and LIKE your garden site.

Best Spots for Hummers – Find us on *Yelp

How?
1. You are going to put a hummingbird feeder out so as the first hummingbirds arrive they will "Twitter, Email, Blog or Yelp” to let their compadres know where the good feeders are (active full feeders, not the ones that you left hanging on the pole since May with dried sugar water).

2. Once the hummers arrive, you need to be prepared to boil your sugar water (hummingbird feeder mixture) every 2 or 3 days as the need occurs. Check and fill your feeders as they may run out in a 24 hour period and clean and change them every 2 days. If possible, you already have a garden with hummingbird friendly plants but know they are definitely going to go for the feeders.

Why is That?
This is a crucial time for hummers. They’ve gotta tank up before any major weather change that would adversely affect them, like northers or cold weather. Feeders should be up in time for their arrival.

When & Where?
The hummingbirds are on a time schedule; they aren’t dawdling around - not like the easy going butterfly, flitting from flower to flower. The hummers are on a mission. They have a schedule to keep. This tiny little bird migrates to Mexico every fall and then returns every spring, sometimes traveling as far as 2000 miles. Some do stay around but the majority of them don’t.

Who?
Hummers have a good memory; they can remember food sources from previous years. Well they sure remember Marylyn’s garden “Jardin de Colores.” There were so many of them whirring around in the spring this year, I couldn’t count ‘em all. As many or more than in this UTube: 2007 Ruby-throated Hummingbird

To learn more, click Ruby-throated Hummingbirds and migration,

For those of you like me, are new to Social Media, you may not have heard of Yelp (and I don’t mean my dog Herbie’s yelp).

*Yelp
*Yelp is a local reviews website. Users write and read reviews about anything from their favorite hole in the wall restaurant to the worst downtown club (or best hummingbird feeder location). It was founded in 2004 by two former PayPal employees and was named from a contraction of the Yellow Pages. Yelp offers social networking features: the ability to add friends, groups, events, talk in forums or message contacts. The idea behind this is that users will trust their friend’s reviews more than others.

Recipe for Homemade Hummingbird Mixture

• 1 part sugar (not honey) Don't use honey/artificial sweeteners in place of sugar.
• 4 parts water
• Boil for 1 to 2 minutes. Cool.
• Store extra in refrigerator

Marylyn and I are planning a celebration of the Ruby-Throated Hummingbird Migration on Saturday, September 11, 2010 in her garden. Details will soon be posted.

To be ready for the migration, I’m going to go get some hummingbird feeders. What are your plans? _______________________