View allAll Photos Tagged RubyThroatedHummingbirds
This flower is Plasticus cardinalis....
it grows in zone 2! Maybe even Alaska. Hummingbirds and aunts love it.
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird
The humming birds enjoy our new feeders.
This image was taken in Central Massachusetts.
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird
The humming birds enjoy our new feeders.
This image was taken in Central Massachusetts.
A Ruby-throated Hummingbird
The humming birds enjoy our new feeders.
This image was taken in Central Massachusetts.
This is the male Ruby Throated Hummingbird his Iridescent red throat feathers are dark until sunlight hits them.
A female or possibly a juvenile. He or she seemed a little smaller and stalkier than the other hummingbirds visiting my garden so I thought it may be a juvinile.
Got this picture as I was setting up the camera, tripod, and remote. I was looking through the lens to compose the shot and the little bugger appeared.
Installed a new Hummingbird feeder in the backyard this weekend and immediately the male youth showed up. Set up my camera and a way we went. I want to get a shot of his wings stopped in midair. Because we are having a wet summer this years there haven’t seen many bright days for high speed shots. Hope for sunshine today.
Cardinal Flower (Lobelia cardinalis) relies heavily on the Ruby-throated Hummingbird for pollination. The tubular flower holds nectar, and the stamens and pistils are strategically placed so that pollen transfer is successful. I photographed this hummer on my property in Madison Co., NC.
the hummers are at the feeders non-stop this morning ... and that is because it is cold here with periods of wet SNOW!!!!! the white drops you see in the background is the snow ... *sigh*