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View Full Version : How I got a hummer in my man cave


Utah Bob
05-26-2010, 07:48
It was a fine Spring late afternoon. The hideous wind and dust/snow/hail storms had finally simmered down after 5 days. The moon was already up with about 4 hours of daylight left.

As I sat at my workbench preparing to do some cosmetic work on the Stoeger shotgun, I felt a disturbance in the force. It was a small disturbance, one that distracted me from the George Strait tune on the radio that I had been tapping my foot to. A buzzing filled my ears. I had the door open letting the refreshing gentle breeze waft through and something had wafted in with it.
I ducked, thinking it was the granddaddy of all yellow jackets come for a reckoning.

But as I timidly raised off the floor and peered out from under the bench, I discovered my man cave had been invaded by what the Navajo call a dah-he-tih-hi. Biologists know them as Selasphorus rufus. I just call 'em Hummers. Not to be confused with the armored kind nor the squishy kind.
They've just started to show up with the onset of the warm weather. I put out a feeder just the other day for the early arrivals. Fascinatingly cantankerous and competitive little fellas. Thank goodness they're not the size of mallards., They would be blood in the streets.

Assuming the pointy beaked nectar sucker would find his way back out in a minute, I ignored him. But after about 20 minutes the incessant buzzing was molesting my concentration. It appeared he was directionally challenged. He constantly whammed up against the ceiling, ignoring the open door he had flown through. I tried to shoo him back out. This proved about as successful as trying to herd flies. I got a cardboard target backer and tried to hold it up to the ceiling and move him toward the door. He would put up with this till my arms got tired and then buzz around the cardboard quick as a wink.

I decided perhaps the fluorescent light was confusing him so I turned it off. No dice. I turned the radio off in case he had been attracted to country music. Then I turned it back on and put both Christian and Hip Hop music on.... loud. Alas, neither chased him away (it always works on me).

I went outside. I don't know if I expected him to follow me like a dog or what but he stayed humming around the ceiling completely oblivious to my attempts to evict him. Knowing they are attracted by bright things I git a red bucket and a gas can and set them on the porch just outside the door. He took absolutely no notice of them as they sat glistening in the sun. I went up to the yard and got the hummingbird feeder and hung it in the doorway. It might as well of had a sign on it in hummingbirdese saying "Ignore this. It's a trick. Stay where you are."

After about an hour of this I retreated to the lean-to and cleaned my chainsaw. Not in preparation of using it on him. Just for something to do.
I check back in and didn't see the Hummer. "Har", I thought, "My superior intellect has defeated you". I closed the door and went up to the house for an iced tea.

About two hours later I returned to the shed, made sure no birds were luring about waiting to pull off a shed invasion, and opened the door.
There he sat perching on a picture frame. Looking ruffled, frustrated and exhausted. I figured he must be feeling poorly seeing as how they have to eat like every 20 seconds or so to keep up that insane wing beating.
"This will not do", I thought. I tried the target technique again with no success. Tried a nice red fly swatter. Tried insulting him. Wrote up an eviction notice and waved it at him. I was on the verge of assaulting him with some hideous writings of William Topaz McGonagall when I noticed he was taking longer and more frequent breaks. Perching on the lamp chain, a beer stein, a helmet mounted on the wall. I was able to sneak a little closer to him each time.

As stealthily as an Apache Scout I crept closer. Finally with the quick but subtle hand movements displayed by casino Blackjack dealers, I deftly scooped him up.
"Bird", I paraphrased Jeremiah Johnson, "I am yore friend".

I dashed outside with the pint-sized devil and headed to the bird feeder I'd hung back in the oak tree in the yard. He didn't move when I opened my hand. I was afraid that my sometimes almost superhuman strength had seriously injured him. As I held him up to the feeder he slowly put one foot out, gripped the rail and then hauled himself upright. After a few seconds (that might be longer in bird time) he shook himself and began to suck up some sugar water. Looking bedraggled after his ordeal, he kept one eye on me as I stood only a few feet away. Couldn't tell if he as grateful or really pissed. I suspect a little of both.

Anyway I left him to his dinner.

And that, my friends, was how, on a fine Spring afternoon in my man cave, I got a Hummer.:D

JJ_BPK
05-26-2010, 08:45
It was a fine Spring late afternoon. The hideous wind and dust/snow/hail storms had finally simmered down after 5 days. The moon was already up with about 4 hours of daylight left.

......

And that, my friends, was how, on a fine Spring afternoon in my man cave, I got a Hummer.:D

I think you should leave the door to your man cave open more often.

The idea of more delightful stories could inspire you to a new career as a wondering minstrel or troubadour or ,, or,, or bon vi·vant hummer-hunter...

Thank you,

Con su permiso,, I shall send this to my list of over worked cubicle troglodytes. It will enlighten they're spirits or possibly show how truly meaningless their existence is..

In either case it's a win-win... :D:lifter:D

Richard
05-26-2010, 08:56
Nice story...and 'teaser' of a 'header'... ;)

I love Hummingbirds. In Georgia, we had a Honeysuckle outside our informal dining area in the kitchen and used to watch some bright green Ruby-Throated Hummingbirds come feed there. In Cloverdale, CA, our friend's place where we stay in the hills above the Alexander Valley's wonderful zinfandel yielding vineyards has a fountain near the deck overlooking the pool area (see pic) and there are several Hummingbirds who come and drink there throughout the day - the second pic is one of them drinking there.

Richard's $.02 :munchin

mojaveman
05-26-2010, 10:48
Refreshing story Bob.

I once had the same experience but with a small bat instead.

LibraryLady
05-26-2010, 14:07
I lurrve me them little rascals! In our previous place, we had two or three that wintered over - apparently there's quite a population of them in Puget Sound who do not migrate. Very surprised they survive the cold snaps. I made sure my feeder was thawed out and they practically lived on it!

Hadn't decided to put up a feeder at the new place, but since I had a small screamer zoom past me the other day, I'm gonna get the feeder out and put it up to see what happens.

My cat took one down, but didn't kill it, so I attempted to revive, but alas, to no avail. It is amazing to hold one of them suckers in your hand.

LL

Gypsy
05-26-2010, 18:20
Fantastic AAR! :D

Requiem
05-28-2010, 01:07
What a delightful story sir. Thanks for the laugh tonight.

Your story reminds me of the hair-brained barn swallow that fell down our wood-stove chimney not once, but twice. One spring day I heard a rustle in the wood stove and cautiously opened it. Out flew the ash-covered swallow. I caught it, amazed at how tiny it was, and let it go on the back deck. Next spring, the same thing happened -- rustling in the wood stove and the little ash-covered swallow sat there, waiting for his ticket back outdoors. This time he looked a little embarrassed, as if he'd made an ash of himself... :p

-Susan

Dozer523
05-28-2010, 06:50
I was on a field trip with the Little Dude's 2nd grade class to the local watershed. They had a display of local birds' nests. One was a humming bird's. Besides being tiny with a teeny egg; what I found fascinating was it's made of spiderwebs. It was very flexible and able to expand as the chick grew.
http://www.google.com/images?q=hummingbird+nest&um=1&ie=UTF-8&source=univ&ei=8Lv_S9CmEZKANofIvTs&sa=X&oi=image_result_group&ct=title&resnum=1&ved=0CCwQsAQwAA