It's almost time. I found this migration schedule (by state):
http://hummingbirdworld.com/h/migrate.htm#by-state
This is for Arizona:
To the AZ residents: Does this agree with what you've seen in AZ?
http://hummingbirdworld.com/h/migrate.htm#by-state
This is for Arizona:
Arizona --
Broad-billed Hummingbird -- Arrives late March or early April; leaves in September. Common in some riparian woodlands and mesquite washes in southeastern Arizona.
White-eared Hummingbird -- Rare summer resident in riparian woodlands and pine-oak woodlands in southeastern Arizona. Most often seen at Ramsey Canyon.
Cinnamon Hummingbird (extremly rare) - one summer record from Patagonia.
Berylline Hummingbird -- Rare in summer in Chiricahua, Santa Rita, and Huachuca Mountains of sotheastern Arizona.
Violet-crowned Hummingbird -- Rare summer resident in southeastern Arizona. Riparian woodlands. Most often at Patagonia, Portal, Ramsey Canyon, and Madera Canyon.
Blue-throated Hummingbird -- Arrives April; leaves late October.
Magnificent Humingbird -- Arrives in late March and leaves in late October or early November. Seen in mountains.
Plain-capped Starthroat (very rare)-- Rare in late summer and early fall in southeastern Arizona, likes agave-covered foothills.
Lucifer Hummingbird (rare) -- Arrives early April; leaves early October. In southeastern Arizona, especially in agave-covered foothills
Black-chinned Hummingbird -- Arrives in March, leaves in early October
Anna's Hummingbird -- Common in winter in Tucson and Phoenix. Also in desert scrub and riparian areas. Rare in summer. Nests between January and June.
Costa's Hummingbird -- Common in late winter and spring in desert scrub desert washes, and grassland where there are ocotillos. Uncommon in winter in Tucson.
Calliope Hummingbird -- Rare in April migration; returns in July and can be seen until early September.
Bumblebee Hummingbird -- Possible record over 100 years ago in southeastern Arizona.
Broad-tailed Hummingbird -- Arrives in March; leaves in late September. Seen in mountains.
Rufous Hummingbird -- Passes through, especially in western Arizona, in March and April (uncommon). Then passes through entire state in large numbers from July to mid-October. Rare in winter.
Allen's Hummingbird -- rare, usually in July. Almost impossible to distinguish from Rufous Hummingbird unless it is an adult male.
To the AZ residents: Does this agree with what you've seen in AZ?