The dominant male humming birds that were at my house have now left as well.
They were defending their feeders on Sat evening but they were not seen
yesterday or this morning.
Wanda SanJule
Crozet, VA
-----Original Message-----
From: MARLENECONDON@xxxxxxx [mailto:MARLENECONDON@xxxxxxx] ;
Sent: Friday, August 10, 2012 9:17 AM
To: va-bird@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [Va-bird] male hummers migrating early?
Hi,
Has anyone noticed that their male hummers left early? Mine was gone by the
end of July.
Then on Aug. 3 a male showed up that I feel positive was migrating and not the
resident male. He seemed unfamiliar with the feeder and the juveniles easily
chased him off and were obviously the dominant birds here. Usually the
resident male is the dominant one.
This has been a really strange season animal-wise as well as weather-wise.
Insects have started singing and plants have bloomed a few weeks ahead of
schedule; the natural world seems to be out of sync with its usual order of
activity. Needless to say, what's happening with insects and plants can
affect the lives and activity of birds.
I'd be interested in hearing of anyone's observations along these lines.
Thanks so much!
Sincerely,
Marlene
Marlene A. Condon (Author/Photographer, The Nature-friendly Garden:
Creating A Backyard Haven for Plants, Wildlife, and People [Stackpole Books])
Naturalist and Writer/Photographer/Speaker Crozet, VA 22932-2204
E-mail: MARLENECONDON@xxxxxxx
_www.MARLENECONDON.com_ (http://www.marlenecondon.com/)
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