View Full Version : An Unusual Visitor To The Hummingbird Feeder
humminbird
Sunday 24th October 2004, 18:25
Just looked up to find a very unusual site at my hummingbird feeder - a Carolina Wren was hanging from the feeder wire and trying to use one of the ports. Has anyone else experienced this with a wren? I have heard of House Finches, Sparrow spp., woodpeckers and orioles attempting to use a hummingbird feeder, but this wren is a first for me.
Mark
erizzo
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 00:13
Wierd. I've never heard of a Wren on Hummer Feeder before. I've never seen any other bird at my Hummer Feeder eept my little Green Backed Firecrowns.
humminbird
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 00:51
Thanks Eric. We have seen photos of other birds, most often woodpeckers, at the feeders, but this was a first for me.
KCFoggin
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 00:52
Just looked up to find a very unusual site at my hummingbird feeder - a Carolina Wren was hanging from the feeder wire and trying to use one of the ports. Has anyone else experienced this with a wren? I have heard of House Finches, Sparrow spp., woodpeckers and orioles attempting to use a hummingbird feeder, but this wren is a first for me.
Mark
Hi Mark. Never seen a wren, but have seen all the others. This winter, I am leaving a couple of hummer feeders up and I have specifically removed a couple of flower inserts from one of them to see if I can get more Oriole action.
humminbird
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 01:15
Hi Mark. Never seen a wren, but have seen all the others. This winter, I am leaving a couple of hummer feeders up and I have specifically removed a couple of flower inserts from one of them to see if I can get more Oriole action.
A friend of mine in the Carolinas reports hummingbirds there all winter almost every year. Maybe they will find you too!
KCFoggin
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 01:20
I'm hoping for the rufous this winter that has taken up residence in a friend's yard 3 miles away.:bounce:
humminbird
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 01:29
Rufous are certainly beautiful and interesting birds, but a resident winter Rufous often means only a resident winter Rufous, where some of the other overwintering birds here in the south will often mean several winter hummingbirds.
KCFoggin
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 01:38
Good point Mark.
Missy
Tuesday 26th October 2004, 22:25
It seems like ever bird in my yard likes the hummingbird feeder except the doves. Woodpeckers, sparrows, finches and what I think is a thrasher. My cactus wrens love the feeder too. The humminbird actually followed the wren up into the tree and buzzed it for a few seconds just to let it know it didn't want it around.
humminbird
Wednesday 27th October 2004, 02:41
It seems like ever bird in my yard likes the hummingbird feeder except the doves. Woodpeckers, sparrows, finches and what I think is a thrasher. My cactus wrens love the feeder too. The humminbird actually followed the wren up into the tree and buzzed it for a few seconds just to let it know it didn't want it around.
Thanks for the input Missy. I would watch a Cactus Wren at or around a hummingbird feeder. While I have never heard of a Cactus Wren doing it, I have read blow by blow accounts of Rock Wrens killing and consuming a hummingbird in west Texas.
Mark
Missy
Wednesday 27th October 2004, 03:34
:eek!: I've never heard of that Mark. Hopefully my cactus wrens are well-fed enough that they won't do that.
humminbird
Thursday 28th October 2004, 23:40
:eek!: I've never heard of that Mark. Hopefully my cactus wrens are well-fed enough that they won't do that.
To my knowledge Missy, Rock Wrens are the only species I have a written account of, but you may want to keep an eye on other large species.
Chris D
Saturday 30th October 2004, 16:20
all I get is ants (other than the 6 species of hummers I get). Wouldn't mind knowing what species of hummer was taken in Texas. Or how it happened. I'm used to Rufous chasing everything, not the other way around.
humminbird
Saturday 30th October 2004, 16:56
The hummingbird taken by the Rock Wren was a juvenile Black-chinned no gender given.
Chuck A. Walla
Friday 19th November 2004, 05:25
Just looked up to find a very unusual site at my hummingbird feeder - a Carolina Wren was hanging from the feeder wire and trying to use one of the ports. Has anyone else experienced this with a wren? I have heard of House Finches, Sparrow spp., woodpeckers and orioles attempting to use a hummingbird feeder, but this wren is a first for me.
Mark
I commonly get House Finches also, but today I saw a couple of Lesser Golfinches trying to feed off a hummer feeder. That was a first for me.
bob
craig whitmore
Friday 19th November 2004, 20:21
Just looked up to find a very unusual site at my hummingbird feeder - a Carolina Wren was hanging from the feeder wire and trying to use one of the ports. Has anyone else experienced this with a wren? I have heard of House Finches, Sparrow spp., woodpeckers and orioles attempting to use a hummingbird feeder, but this wren is a first for me.
Mark
Mark: at our campo in Baja California Sur in Mexico 4 or 5 of us each had 2 or 3 large, 6 station feeders. Hooded Orioles were a real problem. Ideal habitat for oriole. Date palms gave them nesting material, nesting sites, and plenty of food, and we were up to our armpits with the beautiful pests. They'd bump the feeders to get drops out and the whole place would be covered with ants.
My neighbor rigged up a rube goldberg device with a perch next to the feeder, connected to a pulley and lever, and when the oriole landed on the perch he got a gentle swat in the butt with a fly swatter.
Tip for you guys and gals: Read somewhere that 60 per cent of hummingbird diet is insects. (makes sense, very little protien in carbohydrate)
Placed a hollowed orange peel under the feeders. In 3 days had a bunch of drisophla. Hummingbird wings would stir up the fruit flys, and the birds would have a field day nailing them.
Craig
Jampots
Friday 19th November 2004, 20:57
"our" raccoon used to pick off the yellow plastic flowers covering the ports and drink the syrup himself. we'd find the yellow flowers bits all over the yard - well chewed too!
P>S> just a thought - would butterflies feed from a hummingbird feeder? Not sure why I packed our feeder and brought it back to England!!
humminbird
Saturday 20th November 2004, 12:51
[QUOTE=Jampots
P>S> just a thought - would butterflies feed from a hummingbird feeder? Not sure why I packed our feeder and brought it back to England!![/QUOTE]
Yes, racoons are well known as raiders of hummingbird feeders. I guess everyone likes a sweet drink once in a while.
Don't know about the butterflies. In my experience, every butterfly feeder I have ever seen has worked on a wick action. I don't know if the ports would be too deep for their poboscis.
Mark
Bastrop, TX
humminbird
Saturday 20th November 2004, 12:56
I commonly get House Finches also, but today I saw a couple of Lesser Golfinches trying to feed off a hummer feeder. That was a first for me.
bob
House Finch are well documented but Lesser Goldfinch, now that is another first for me!
billhiltonjr
Tuesday 30th November 2004, 00:05
Just looked up to find a very unusual site at my hummingbird feeder - a Carolina Wren was hanging from the feeder wire and trying to use one of the ports. Has anyone else experienced this with a wren? I have heard of House Finches, Sparrow spp., woodpeckers and orioles attempting to use a hummingbird feeder, but this wren is a first for me.
Mark
One source I encountered says that well over 100 different species of birds besides hummingbirds have been known to frequent sugar water feeders.
And then there are the lizards, squirrels, and ubiquitous ants and yellow jackets.
Cheers,
BILL
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