Ruby-throat approaching Royal Catchfly Photo by Vickie Henderson
Today was one of those days for me! Yesterday, I brought home a new native plant species hummingbirds love--Royal Catchfly (Silene regia). A native prairie plant, it gets its name from glands that secrete a sticky enzyme that attracts and captures insects. Though the plant is related to carnivorous plants, it does not benefit nutritionally from the insects.
The new flower species was only one change that attracted my attention and the hummers. I added a new feeder. The two males guarding the four feeders I had out were chasing all the juveniles away. No sooner would an approaching juvenile escape one male, than it would be intercepted by the second. Not nice--but typical hummingbird behavior.
A juvenile male waiting to approach a feeder.
I added the new feeder around the corner near a small garden. Wthin minutes of hanging it, Wow! Juveniles! Sometimes two or three arriving at the same time, reacting to each other with tails flared, face-offs and chirps. Very shortly, however, another male showed up. A beautiful male, breath-taking to see at such close range. I was sitting only a few feet from the feeder.
The male, pictured above, was showing some molting, replacing old feathers with new ones, his feathers getting ready for fall migration.
The tenacity of one of the juveniles was surprising He did not want to give up his feeder and challenged the male repeatedly. In the image below, the male is watching the juvenile and balancing to face him as he hovers and threatens.
When the juvenile landed on the feeder after the male departed, the male was quickly on him displaying shuttle dives, short repetitive U-shaped dives, coming very close to the juvenile at its lowest point. I have seen this display during courtship but never before witnessed it during aggression at the feeder. Serious stuff. So far, warnings, but getting close to the real thing.
Male juvenile, above, hiding in the catchfly, showing developing red gorget feathers as he looks up. Every day of their fast-paced lives holds a survival story!
Juvenile Ruby-throat with Coneflowers Watercolor by Vickie Henderson
This is the height of hummingbird season, the best time to see and enjoy them. The first juveniles are out of the nest, second nesting has begun, and northern hummingbirds have already begun migration.
For an extra treat this season, join us at the Wonder of Hummingbirds Festival at Ijams Nature Center, in Knoxville, TN, on August 20th to celebrate these magnificent birds! More information is found in the link below.
Links and resources:
Photo credits: All the photos in this blog post were taken by Vickie Henderson
Ijams Nature Center website with festival information
Wonder of Hummingbird Festival
Links for hummingbirds in art:
Hummingbird art at Vickie Henderson Art
Hummingbird posts at Vickie's Sketchhbook
Sketching hummingbirds in flight
Hummingbird Studies in watercolor