Showing posts with label Hummingbirds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hummingbirds. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 27, 2010

The hummingbirds are back and the Celtic festival




Every year, I anxiously await the arrival of the beloved hummers. I thought they were very late this year but when I looked back on last year's post, it was the same date as this year...April 26th. I seem to have it in my mind that they return mid April not the end...but anyway they're back and I'm happy.


The Celtic festival which was a big success last year is going to be on Main St. this year! The city council approved it and I'm really looking forward to the Celtic fun and bagpipes downtown on June 19th. Come by and see us if you can! http://www.frontroyalcelticfestival.com/


Sunday, April 26, 2009

Alleluia, they're back!




The hummingbirds have returned!!




AND...






The Celtic Festival was a success!!


1,000 people turned out for the fun event.

Saturday, February 28, 2009

Fun Facts




Hummingbirds are one of my favorite birds (obviously!) . Here are some fun facts I found on the internet. .


Hummingbirds occur only in the Americas.

The smallest hummingbird, the Bee Hummingbird, weighs a little under two grams. The largest, the Giant Hummingbird, weighs 21 to 23 grams.

Hummingbirds eat plant nectar, plant pollen, and insects – but their diet is 90 percent nectar.

Like bees, hummingbirds carry pollen from one plant to another while they are feeding, thus playing an important role in plant pollination. Each bird visits between one and two thousand blossoms each day.

Hummingbirds can see ultraviolet light, which may enable them to identify certain varieties of plant.

Though we generally see them in flight, hummingbirds perch for most of their lives.

On average, hummingbird wings beat about 80 times each second, but in some species 200 beats a second has been documented.

A hummingbird breathes 300 to 500 times each minute while active.

The hummingbird heart is about 20 percent of the bird’s body volume. It beats about 500 times a minute. Heartbeats vary between different species and during different activities, and range from 30 to 1200 beats a minute.

Hummingbirds sometimes enter a state of torpor, usually during the night when they are not feeding. In torpor, metabolism slows down saving up to 60 percent of the bird’s available energy.
After feeding and doubling its weight,, the Ruby-throated Hummingbird flies nonstop across the Gulf of Mexico during migration. The flight takes about 20 hours.

Here's something I would like to do someday: