bob@omni.com (Bob Weissman) (01/03/91)
A recent cold snap in the San Francisco Bay Area has increased the hummingbird activity level at my backyard feeder. With the local vegetation all frozen to death, the sugar water seems to have turned into their staple food. Anyway, I was refilling the feeder yesterday. It ordinarily hangs from a bracket on my backyard fence, and has little perches where the hummers can sit while they suck sugar. Well, I'm walking out with the feeder to hang it back up, and this little hummer flies over and lands on it while it's still in my hand! Takes a few sips, and flies off again. I'm used to these little guys being fearless; they buzz around us all the time, chasing each other. But this behavior surprised me, and suggested the possibility of training the birds. Has anyone succeeded in training wild hummers to perch on a finger? Or are they just nearsighted and this one didn't know it was within arm's reach (literally) of a person? -- Bob Weissman Internet: bob@omni.com UUCP: ...!{apple,decwrl,pyramid,sgi,uunet}!omni!bob
wwf@oz.plymouth.edu (Dr. Wavell Fogleman) (01/03/91)
The word I've gotten from frieds and relatives in CA is that hummers especially Anna's are being found dead by the 2's and 4's in yards following the cold snap. Your bird was surely just anxious to get nourishment. Any other observations relative to numbers of hummers dying?
priag@ESD.3Com.COM (Pria Graves) (01/15/91)
I've seen the one pair that usually over-winter's at my place since the freeze - but then my feeder didn't ever freeze up. They've been using the feeder far more than usual however.