So hummers don't share poop, wouldn't it be best to have feeders where they
don't sit and drink?
Janet Kelly
Medford
Sent from my iPhone
On Apr 28, 2017, at 9:55 AM, Robert O'Brien <baro@xxxxxxx<mailto:baro@xxxxxxx>>
wrote:
On Friday, April 28, 2017, Robert O'Brien <baro@xxxxxxx<mailto:baro@xxxxxxx>>
wrote:
I've always made the solution by pouring boiling water over the sugar in aMicrowave the feeder/solution that is. But NOT to boil.
pyrex container, stirring to dissolve & then pouring that quickly into the
feeder. That takes awhile to cool. Not sure when the feeder drops below 160.
Could measure i guess. Or microwave the feeder if not metal and it fits?
Bob obrien
PS. Thanks for the info.
On Friday, April 28, 2017, Elise W
<ewolf97@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:ewolf97@xxxxxxxxx>> wrote:
A bird's tongue can definitely be damaged by hitting a window, generally
this is from them biting the tongue during the impact. However, a hummer's
tongue is split on the end. New research using advanced video now shows how
the hummer tongue actually works.
https://phys.org/news/2011-05-hummingbird-tongue-video.html
If someone unfamiliar with hummer anatomy assessed a bird and thought it's
split tongue was a fracture, that would be a mistake. As the tongue already
has a split. The swelling of the tongue may or may not have been resolved
through time and care. Dosing a hummer with medications is extraordinarily
difficult.
Swelling could have resulted from: fungal infection (mold easily grows in
the sugar water we feed, water that looks milky or has transparent threads
are a key sign); bacterial infection (birds are brought into close contact
with each other at the feeder, so their poop is shared with others on their
feet... Infections historically found in only some species (like house finch
eye disease) is now spreading to other species like goldfinch); or biting
the tongue upon impact in a window strike.
Regardless, keeping the feeders clean (warm weather means once a week
minimum). Cleaning: wash with soapy water, rinse, bleach with 5-10%
solution, then wash again with soapy water as bleach leaves a residue that
could easily kill your hummers. Rinse multiple times. You can also choose to
use very hot (160 degree) water (boil it) and dip the whole feeder into
this. Boiling water kills almost everything - viruses, bacteria, molds,
fungi, parasites - while bleach is mainly effective for bacteria only.
Elise Wolf
Native Bird Care
Sisters, OR
541-728-8208