A male Anna's Hummingbird has claimed the courtyard as his. →[More:]He sits on the telephone wires across the street, at the end of a dead branch on one of our roses and the top of a spruce tree. Among other places. And he sings from dawn to dusk.
He looks like
this on perch. Just a little bit bigger than that and with an all black gorge, that is, throat, and forehead, which he can flash bright red orange if he is of a mind. Quite startling up close, quite visible from across the street. It's like a little flare. (I think that picture linked was taken when that male was just starting to flash his gorge. Our little guy is all black in the appropriate areas until he lets his freak flag fly.)
Once you learn their oh so quiet reedy buzzing
song, you don't forget it. And then you realize how many there are, at least, that is, hereabouts in Seattle. Capitol Hill seems to have one or two on every block right now.
We had a female nesting in a big blue spruce in one of our parking lots two summers ago. I caught her once hovering upwards into the branches to her nest when I was nearby.
Or rather she caught me catching her hovering upwards and took off like an X-wing fighter going into hyperdrive. Which they do -- they are the fastest of birds.
And then she circled the parking lot and tried to come up behind me. Only I was wise to her game --birds hate it when you see them going to a nest-- and turned to face her.
And when I did, she was coming up the sidewalk, from bush to bush.
She then stopped about ten feet away and hovered at eye level and looked me in the eyes. Until I turned my back and let her be.
It was one of those mystical with a small 'm' moments.
I saw her go up into those branches more than once and heard her little chicks squealing when she did but I never saw them or the
nest.
I do love me some hummingbirds. I am quite tickled to see that guy wheezing out his little quiet little song at the end of the rose branch each morning when I go to get coffee.
I do so hope he swings successfully and we get another
nesting female this summer. That will be delightful.