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You are here: Home / Archives for Hummingbird Nests

Hidden Nest

In a Busy Public Garden …

There is a hidden nest on this frond.

A hidden nest atop a frond
A hidden hummingbird nest

The frond leans over a bench in a garden. You could sit right below this hummingbird nest and not know it was there.

We would not have seen this hidden nest on our own. I was told about it. There had been two chicks. They had left the nest.

Clues

An empty hummingbird nest surrounded by many droppings on the surface of the plant frond
An empty, used hummingbird nest

Since we were too late to see the chicks, we looked at the nest for clues. All of the droppings on the leaf are a good sign. The hummingbird babies would have to have grown big to make that much waste. The nest is also flattened out, which happens as the babies get big.

Hummingbird chicks that have recently left the nest call out to their mother to be fed (a high-pitched “peep!). We did see an immature hummingbird nearby but did not hear any peeping or see any begging.

Picture of a young Allen's Hummingbird perching on a small branch
Young Allen’s Hummingbird

We concluded that this was likely an Allen’s Hummingbird nest. We based that conclusion on the many Allen’s Hummingbirds in this coastal Southern California garden. And the nest seemed a little smaller than the Anna’s Hummingbird nests we are used to seeing.

A male Allen's Hummingbird perches amid leaves in a Bottle Brush tree
Allen’s Hummingbird

The garden was busy – with visitors and with many Allen’s Hummingbirds. The hummingbirds were chasing each other during the middle of the day.

If you followed their buzzy, chattering calls, you could find them, high in the trees.

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Filed Under: Hummingbird Nests, Hummingbird Species

How small is a hummingbird nest?

Compared to things we handle everyday, just how small is a hummingbird nest? It is hard to tell, so I took photos of an empty hummingbird nest with small coins next to it for size comparison. Take a look at these pictures of one Anna’s Hummingbird nest, first with the baby in it, then later next to pennies (or cents) from the U.S., Canada, Great Britian and Europe.

Before – the hummingbird nest with one baby
Close up picture of a hummingbird nest with a baby hummingbird. This side view shows the nest on twigs.
Hummingbird nest with one baby – before

It was late in the season and getting hot by the time this baby hummingbird fledged. The mother hummingbird would not reuse the nest this year. The nest was in a low tree branch, about 6 to 7 feet (2 meters) off the ground.  After the nest had been empty for about a week, I came back with step ladder, coins, and double-stick tape.

Hummingbird nest with coin – United States penny
Close up picture answers how small is a hummingbird nest by showing a U.S. penny next to the nest.
Same hummingbird nest – now empty – with US penny

Here is a U.S. penny next to the nest. The nest has dried and shrunken a little bit since it has been empty. But the penny’s size still shows how tiny the hummingbird nest is.

Hummingbird nest with coin – Canadian penny
Close up picture of a Canadian penny next to a hummingbird nest.
Same empty hummingbird nest – Canadian penny

Here is the hummingbird nest compared to a Canadian penny. Anna’s Hummingbirds nest along the West coast of Canada.

Hummingbird nest with coin – British penny
Close up picture of a hummingbird nest next to a British penny to answer how small is a hummingbird nest.
Same empty hummingbird nest – British penny

Here it is compared to a British penny. This is for our British viewers – sorry no hummingbirds outside of the Americas.

Hummingbird nest with coin – Euro cent
Close up photo of a Euro cent coin next to a hummingbird nest for size comparison
Same empty hummingbird nest – Euro cent

And a Euro cent coin. This is for our viewers across Europe. Again, no hummingbirds in Europe. Hummingbirds are only found in the Americas (with the majority in South and Central America).

Hummingbird nest with ruler
Picture of an empty hummingbird nest from above with a ruler next to it. How small is a hummingbird nest? The ruler shows less than 2 inches.
A different empty hummingbird nest with a ruler

Here is a picture from above of another empty, well-used Anna’s Hummingbird nest. See the post on a different Anna’s Hummingbird nest over time for more photos of this nest. The nest measured less than 2 inches (~ 5 cm). Go here to see this nest with the tiny eggs in it.

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Filed Under: Hummingbird Nests, Hummingbird Pictures

Mother’s Day Hummingbird

Here’s a Mother’s Day hummingbird, tending her big chicks today, May 11, 2014. It’s Mother’s Day today here in the U.S. and in many parts of the world.

Close up picture of a Mother's Day hummingbird perching next to her nest in a Juniper tree.

We think this hummingbird mom is the same Anna’s Hummingbird who already successfully raised a brood of chicks this season. But there is no way to really know. The hummingbird babies in this nest are about to fledge. One of them was practicing wing flapping this morning.

There are many other hummingbird mom pictures in these recent posts: Desert Botanical Garden nests, a nest in the Aviary at Arizona Sonora Desert Museum, and a mother feeding a fledgling. Older posts:  a mother feeding young babies, and a mother sitting the nest.

Happy Mother’s Day to all moms and their families!

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Filed Under: Hummingbird Nests, Hummingbird Pictures

Hummingbird Nests at the Desert Botanical Garden

Each spring, we keep an eye out for hummingbird nests at the Desert Botanical Garden. The Garden has created a haven for our local hummingbirds, with its variety of plants, cover, and the availability of water. It is a perfect place for hummingbirds to nest. Here are some nests from spring 2014.

Close up picture of a hummingbird sitting her nest amidst twigs at the Desert Botanical Garden
Anna’s Hummingbird on her Nest

This Anna’s Hummingbird put her nest directly over a busy walking path near the center of the Garden. Many Garden visitors were lucky enough to notice the nest overhead and paused briefly to watch. Here are a series of pictures taken over several weeks.

Note: The photos in this post were taken with a super telephoto lens (500mm).

An Anna's Hummingbird perches on the sharp point of an agave at the Desert Botanical Garden. The background is a light green of the agave.
Guarding the Nest from Nearby

Here the mother perched on an agave leaf, watching. She was often visible hunting for insects or feeding from flowers. Or she could be seen perching nearby, watching the nest and the general area.

Picture of a hummingbird baby in the nest looks up toward its mother as she perches on the nest
Mother and Baby Hummingbird

Amidst the tangled twigs of a Palo Verde tree, the mother sat on the edge of the nest with one of the baby hummingbirds visible.

Picture of a hummingbird baby with its beak wide open and its mother feeding it while perched on a twig.
Feeding the Last Hummingbird Chick

Hummingbirds typically lay two eggs. The two chicks (or babies) often hatch a day or so apart. The first chick may leave the nest a day or more before the second one does. In this photo, the mother feeds her last baby in the nest. It was practicing flapping its wings on this day and looked ready to leave.

Picture from below and to the side of a fledgling hummingbird perches on a small twig
Fledgling Hummingbird

Her other chick – now a fledgling – was up in the branches above the nest. The fledglings are not immediately on their own once they leave the nest. A mother Anna’s Hummingbird will come back to feed her fledglings for some period of time. The mother came and fed this fledgling around the same time she fed the chick still in the nest.

The next time I came through, the nest was empty.

We saw a couple of other hummingbird nests at the Desert Botanical Garden that spring. We heard of even more. Hummingbird nests are usually hard to see for many reasons: tiny size, location, foliage.

Here are pictures of two other hummingbird nests at the Desert Botanical Garden, just for fun.

Picture of a hummingbird from the side as she sits her nest in a eucalyptus tree
Nest in Eucalyptus Tree

Though not a native tree, hummingbirds make good use of Eucalyptus.

Picture of a hummingbird feeding her baby amidst a tangle of twigs
Nest in Palo Verde Tree

The tangled twigs of the Palo Verde tree make a good, small enclosure for a hummingbird nest.

Special thanks to the Garden staff and volunteers for watching out for the hummingbird families while still allowing us to share in the wonder.

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Filed Under: Hummingbird Nests, Hummingbird Pictures

Close up of mother hummingbird feeding fledgling

Out of the nest, still being fed

Here’s a close look at a mother Anna’s Hummingbird feeding her fledgling hummingbird. All week long, we heard “peep, peep” from one, sometimes two, young Anna’s Hummingbirds in the Texas Ebony trees outside our front door. These baby hummingbirds left (“fledged”) their nearby nest at the end of March/early April 2014.

Mother and Fledgling Hummingbird

Close up picture of a young fledgling hummingbird sitting on a twig. The view of this Anna's Hummingbird is from below and to the side.
Fledgling Hummingbird Waits

One of the fledglings in particular stayed in the trees and waited to be fed. It would flit around in the branches a little. It also did a lot of perching and waiting. And calling.

Close up picture of a mother feeding her fledgling hummingbird. The mother's beak in the fledgling's beak for feeding.
Mother Feeds Her Fledgling

Every so often, we could hear the “chip! chip!” of the mother Anna’s Hummingbird as she announced her approach to her young  hummingbirds. She would often vocalize briefly, then perch beside one of her fledglings, look around, then feed it. She was in and out. 

Close up picture of a mother hummingbird perched on a twig beside her fledgling. The hummingbirds are facing each other after the mother finished feeding the fledgling.
Mother and Fledgling Hummingbird

The hummingbirds are about the size of the curved, dark brown seed pods that are scattered throughout the Texas Ebony tree branches. It was difficult to see the perched birds in the shady canopy and against the bright sky. It was easier to hear them or wait for them to fly about in the branches.

The mother was frequently at the feeder or hummingbird flowers before and after she flew into the branches to feed her young.

Go here to see this hummingbird family while the babies were still in the nest.

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Filed Under: Hummingbird Nests, Hummingbird Pictures

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