
Creating
a Schoolyard Hummingbird Habitat
Materials
-
hummingbird
field guides (optional)
-
computers with Internet connection
-
flowers
to attract hummingbirds (appropriate to your region and location)
-
water
source and garden hose
-
hummingbird feeders
-
sugar to make hummingbird nectar for feeders
-
red ribbons
-
bird misters or drippers (make your own using a bucket)
-
observation journals
1. Getting Ready
To prepare for your first hummingbird visitors, teach students to
use field guides or Internet resources to find out which species
are found where you live. If ruby-throated or rufous hummingbirds
migrate through your area, students can predict the first bird’s
arrival by checking the Journey
North Web site to access current
migration data or compare previous years’ data. The Hummingbirds.net site
maps the ruby-throated migration. Previous years' maps are also
available for study and comparison. To find approximate
arrival dates for other U.S. hummingbird species, click
here.
Just before their
spring migration, hummingbirds gorge themselves on nectar and insects.
Some even double their body weight to store
enough energy to make the journey north. When they arrive, they
survive on insects, the nectar of early-blooming flowers, and even
tree sap,
which they lap from holes made by woodpeckers known as sapsuckers.
During this critical time, you can provide food for hummingbirds
— and maybe even entice a few to stay — by hanging feeders and
planting early-blooming trees, shrubs, and wildflowers that are
indigenous
to your area.
2. Hanging Feeders
Ideally, feeders should be hung where students can observe them and
where they are safe and accessible to hummingbirds. Have students
survey
the schoolyard to determine the most sheltered places for hummingbirds
to feed that have good access (e.g., a corridor of trees or shrubs
leading to the area). To help attract the birds' attention, hang
red ribbons on
the feeders and nearby shrubs. If you live in an area where mornings
are chilly, use feeders without perches, as hummingbirds can
become hypothermic if they drink very cold sugar water while
perching.
By hovering while feeding, they warm their bodies and avoid hypothermia.
Check out these other Hummingbird Feeder Tips.
3.
Planting Nectar Flowers
After the feeders are hung, students can learn more
about hummingbirds, come up with additional questions, and plan other
ways to make
the schoolyard a better hummingbird habitat. They could, for
instance, research flowers to grow to increase the food supply and
help catch a hummer’s eye. (See the Which
Plants to Plant? activity. Flowering plants are especially important
to sustain the hummingbird habitat over the summer if feeders will
not maintained during that time.
4. Offering Shelter and Water
As in any schoolyard habitat for wildlife, in addition to food, you
should provide shelter and water. Do you need more trees or shrubs
to create cover, nesting places, or perching spots near feeders?
(Hummingbirds spend about 80 percent of their time perching.)
How will you provide water? In nature, hummingbirds prefer showers
to baths and can often be observed streaking back and forth in
the
fine spray of a waterfall in order to clean their feathers. Commercial
bird misters are available from birdwatchers’ supply stores. Similar
devices that attach to a garden hose are also sold
as plant misters or poolside “personal cooling systems” and are
often less expensive. All use a small amount of water and
can be set
to spray on a timer: the birds have even been known to learn a
misting schedule and regularly appear just in time for their
morning or afternoon
shower. Hummingbirds will also bathe in flight by brushing against
or sliding around on wet leaves. It's quite a site! To create
this bathing
alternative, simply make a small hole in the bottom of a bucket,
fill the bucket with water, hang it above a leafy branch, and
refill as needed.
Seasonal Tips
Although
spring is an ideal time to start a hummer habitat project, you can
integrate hummingbirds into your curriculum throughout the year.
Why not start off the school year with observations of the peak of
the
southward
migration
in your area?
Fall is the best time to plant many of the perennials, shrubs,
trees, and vines that hummingbirds will seek out when they return.
In winter, you can engage students in planning habitat areas
or even propagating plants from seed indoors. No matter what time
of year you start a hummingbird garden, be sure to
avoid
using pesticides. Chemicals sprayed on flowers could be ingested
by the birds and could kill small insects that are an important
source of food for hummingbirds.
Curriculum Connections
When the hummingbirds do arrive in your outdoor classroom, encourage
students to make careful observations, keep records of all the
hummer happenings, conduct investigations and inquiry projects
(click
here for inquiry ideas), continue to improve and expand
habitats, and celebrate the hummingbirds in your schoolyard.
Explore all the ways these avian jewels can naturally motivate
learning
and integrate all areas of the curriculum. Draw on the ideas,
activities, and resources in this month’s Curriculum
Connections section to
get started. If you and your class are lucky enough to attract
an early arriving ruby-throated or rufous hummingbird, don’t
forget to report your sighting online at Journey
North!
Hummingbird
Feeder Tips
- Use feeders designed to exclude wasps, bees, and ants.
- If spring mornings are cold where you live, use a feeder without perches.
Hovering while feeding helps hummingbirds stay warm.
- To make nectar, use one part sugar to four parts water. Use ordinary
granulated white table sugar. Do not use honey, artificial sweeteners, flavorings,
or anything but 20 percent sugar water! Do not add food coloring to nectar.
- To slow the rate of spoilage, boil the nectar for up to two minutes.
Cool the nectar before adding it to the feeder.
- Store unused nectar in the refrigerator for up to two weeks.
- To
avoid waste and cue you to clean and refill the feeder,
only put out a small amount of nectar at a time.
- Always keep feeders clean and nectar fresh!
Cleaning Feeders
When
temperatures are over 60 F, it is best to clean feeders every
two days. To clean, rinse the feeder with hot water. If
you see fungus growing inside (usually black spots), use a bottle
brush or
pipe cleaner to remove all trace of the fungus. You can
also try adding sand and water to the bottle and shaking vigorously
to remove fungus. It is usually not necessary to use soaps
or cleaners. If you do, be sure to rinse thoroughly.
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Guest
Author
Kim Bailey gardens for hummingbirds and other wildlife on two wooded acres at
her home in Georgia. As a Master Gardener and National Wildlife Federation Habitat
Steward volunteer, she also helps schools develop outdoor classrooms and schoolyard
wildlife habitats. Kim is the coordinator of the online clearinghouse for Environmental
Education in Georgia, www.EEinGEORGIA.org.
Educators can visit this Web site to access more lesson plans and resources for
environmental education. Many of the images in this issue of Classroom Projects
News reflect Kim's exemplary observation and photography skills!
Portions of
this article and several of the activities were originally published
in Green Teacher magazine (Spring 2002)
and will also be included in Green Teacher’s upcoming book Teaching
Green: The Middle Years. Following is a list of
the author's references:
Newfield, Nancy
L., and Barbara Nielsen. Hummingbird Gardens: Attracting Nature’s
Jewels to Your Backyard. Houghton Mifflin, 1996.
Osborne, June.
The Ruby-throated Hummingbird. University of Texas Press, 1998.
Sargent, Robert.
Ruby-throated Hummingbird. Stackpole Books, 1999.
Stokes, Donald,
and Lillian Stokes. The Hummingbird Book: The Complete Guide
to Attracting, Identifying, and Enjoying Hummingbirds. Little,
Brown & Company, 1989.
Tyrell, Esther
Quesada. Hummingbirds: Their Life and Behavior, A Photographic
Study of the North American Species. Crown Publishers, 1985.
Williamson,
Shed L. A Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America. Houghton
Mifflin, 2001. (A Peterson Field Guide.)

Copyright©
2004 National Gardening Association
Growing Ideas Classroom Projects is a benefit for NGA's Members
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Contents
Pg.
1: Creating
a Schoolyard Hummingbird Habitat
Pg.
2: Curriculum Connections
Hummingbird
True or False
Territorial
Tactics
Migration
Mishaps
Design
a Hummingbird Flower
Which
Plants to Plant?
Make
Your Own
Hummingbird Feeder
Hummingbird
Inquiry Ideas
Pg.
3: Resources
Web Sites We Like
Hummer
Books for Kids
Hummingbird
Goods from the Gardening with Kids Store
Related Articles
Creating a Habitat
Gardens to Entice
Feathered Friends
Flower
Courtship
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