The Amazing Ruby Throated Hummingbird
Photo by Glenn Fay at Catamount Family Center, Williston, VT.
Anyone who has thrilled to the buzzing and swooping of a hummingbird appreciates their incredible uniqueness. There is a reason they can get our attention! Okay, a lot of reasons.
A hummingbird beats its wings up to 200 times a second and has a heat rate of up to 20 beats per second! The one above is a female, with a white throat, while males have a bright ruby red throat. These tiny birds fly at average speeds of 20-30 mph although they can reach 60! Some can fly 500 miles non-stop across the Gulf of Mexico. There is even a myth that hummingbirds can hitch a ride on larger birds!
The hummingbird can rotate its wings in a circle, they are the only bird that can fly forwards, backwards, up, down ,sideways and hover in mid air. The female lays two pea-sized eggs in a walnut-sized nest and incubates them for 12-16 days. There are 163 different species in Ecuador, although there is only one species in Vermont, or anywhere east of the Mississippi River.
Yet almost 10 percent of hummingbirds worldwide are facing extinction. As pollution, our changing climate and development puts more pressure on birds and their habitat this will continue to be a concern. They also play a role in the ecosystem that would be difficult to replace. According to the Annenberg Project “By flying from flower to flower, the hummingbird pollinates the plants it feeds on. Some plants can only reproduce because of hummingbird pollination. Some insects are eaten by hummingbirds, which in turn have been eaten by small predators, including large insects, some fish, and small hawks..” These are amazingly unusual and beautiful birds. You can attract and support hummingbirds with a feeder in your yard.
Video: handfeeder, youtube
Check out an awesome book on hummingbirds and hummingbird feeders here:


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September 3rd, 2010 at 11:29 am
When I was a greenhouse grower, hummingbirds would fly into the greenhouses via the open vents for the fuschia, lantana and other hanging baskets I was growing. They would perch on the vent pipes and chirp also. I could always tell when they were in the greenhouse by the humming sound of their beating wings. A truly amazing animal.
September 3rd, 2010 at 8:02 pm
Thank you Joanna. I have never heard them chirp! That must be quite a show. Guess we will need to get some lantana to go with our fuschia.