Well, Kotter (our resident male broad-tailed hummingbird - BTHU) continues
to roost every night, at the same time, on the same exact spot on a twig in
our backyard. This is his second year here at that spot - that I am aware
of. He may well have been using that in previous years also. I only got my
hot tub two seasons ago.

 

I just came to realize a few nights ago that he has company in his Douglas
Fir. And I now realize that this second male BTHU has been there this whole
season. I had thought that Kotter came in, and if I was in the hot tub,
would sometimes choose to sit about 2 feet further up (same site
characteristics, needle-laden-limb-roof over his head and perched on a tiny
descending twig) and a few minutes later when he was used to me, he would
come down to his regular perch right in front of me and just over the hot
tub. So much for my powers of observation!

 

With friends in my hot tub also on Monday night, I was giving them the story
and telling them what to expect. Sure enough a male BTHU came in, but alit
on the higher secondary perch; I expected that as there were 4 of us in the
tub talking. Harder to see, but everyone got looks at him through the limb
that is the roof over the primary usual perch. A flutter of cricket-sounding
wings and there Kotter is on his lower perch. But wait, my friends said,
that other hummingbird is still on the higher perch. Two males; two feet
apart; both on a perch directly over my walkway next to my hot tub; both
choosing identically structured perch sites just two feet apart vertically.
More evidence for this male roost site selection characteristic! Quite
surprised that two males roost so close to each other. 

 

I have checked every night since Monday, and sure enough, both males are in
their spots in that tree. They do not deviate 1 millimeter from where they
perch each night.

 

In addition, on my hike above the Black Swift Zapata Falls last week up to
South Zapata Lake above tree line, we discovered a female BTHU nest. 25 feet
high in a Douglas Fir; and if you dropped a penny from the nest, it would
have landed in the middle of the trail. And, the nest was on the lower limb
of an up-and-down forked limb. In this case, both limbs were about 2" in
diameter; as it has to support a nest instead of a perching male's tiny
feet. While I failed to capture a photo showing the location of the nest
over the trail, I do have a picture of a closeup of the nest; see here.
http://www.acdseeonline.com/shared-photo/JJ272/p2aKpqTnPVIJcpKmDLrI/15413637
/#15413637 

 

fyi

 

Jeff J Jones

( <mailto:[email protected]> [email protected])

Teller County - 8500' - Montane Woodlands

 

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