Hummingbird Feeders with Yellow on them?

IrishEyes

Sharon
Location
Midwest
In a video from the Missouri Conservation Agency suggested if you have
Hummingbird Feeders with Yellow paint as an attraction color to take some bright
red nail polish and cover that Yellow with the Red.
Yellow attracts wasps and bees to your feeder as well.

Mine are all red so I don't need to try this but thought it may be interesting to see
if it works. Let me know if it does, if you would?
 
In a video from the Missouri Conservation Agency suggested if you have
Hummingbird Feeders with Yellow paint as an attraction color to take some bright
red nail polish and cover that Yellow with the Red.
Yellow attracts wasps and bees to your feeder as well.

Mine are all red so I don't need to try this but thought it may be interesting to see
if it works. Let me know if it does, if you would?
I agree. Hummingbirds ARE very attracted to red. Years ago I once went out on our veranda with a bright red shirt on and was gently attacked by 3 or 4 hummingbirds thinking I was a feeder. We were just putting up their feeders at the time. I felt their beaks at the sides of my arms.
 
I agree. Hummingbirds ARE very attracted to red. Years ago I once went out on our veranda with a bright red shirt on and was gently attacked by 3 or 4 hummingbirds thinking I was a feeder. We were just putting up their feeders at the time. I felt their beaks at the sides of my arms.
I was in our RV back to the full window on one end and heard this peck, peck. I had a bright red Tshirt on and it was
trying to test me through the window.
I had those feeders a few years back with the centers of the flowers painted
yellow and always had wasps around them that the hummers had to fight away. I see one now and then around my
all red ones I have now, but sure not as many as the ones with yellow did.
 
I was in our RV back to the full window on one end and heard this peck, peck. I had a bright red Tshirt on and it was
trying to test me through the window.
I had those feeders a few years back with the centers of the flowers painted
yellow and always had wasps around them that the hummers had to fight away. I see one now and then around my
all red ones I have now, but sure not as many as the ones with yellow did.
Yes wasps and bees are attracted by the colour and the sugar..We also get wasps on our feeders and they don’t have yellow on them. We have to keep an eye out for them or they’ll ruin the hummingbird feeder enjoyment.
 
I have some yellow on my hummingbird feeders & haven't had a problem with wasps or bees. An occasional one may show up, but that's been it.

I had an abandoned hornets nest that I cut out of a tree a few years ago that finally fell apart last spring that kept the wasps from making nests on my porch. I would love to have another, but nothing has been low enough for me to get to.
 
I have some yellow on my hummingbird feeders & haven't had a problem with wasps or bees. An occasional one may show up, but that's been it.

I had an abandoned hornets nest that I cut out of a tree a few years ago that finally fell apart last spring that kept the wasps from making nests on my porch. I would love to have another, but nothing has been low enough for me to get to.
Maybe you could make a fake wasp nest? A paper bag or something that looks similar? They are such a PITA.
 
I took my humming bird feeders down. I've watched them get territorial and chase each other off. What we don't see is how the chase often ends. Feeders also tend to keep the humming birds back, often during the beginning of migration, so that some of them miss the warm part of the migration start and die on the journey. I've read this on the internet, so it's not something I fully trust. It was long ago and I can't remember the original sources.
 
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I took my humming bird feeders down. I've watched them get territorial and chase each other off. What we don't see is how the chase often ends. Feeders also tend to keep the humming birds back, often during the beginning of migration, so that some of them miss the warm part of the migration start and die on the journey. I've read this on the internet, so it's not something fully trust. It was long ago and I can't remember the original sources were.
See what your states Conservation Dept. has to say about their habits and patterns. Trust them over the web professors.
 
Here is Missouri's tips on them:

Hang feeders​

One simple way to attract rubythroats is to build or buy a hummingbird feeder and fill it with a nectar solution. Providing a complete diet in your feeder is not essential, because the birds will balance their diets on their own. Hang the feeder where you can see it from inside your house.

If you have many competing hummingbirds, consider placing additional feeders in different parts of your yard.

Buying feeders​

When shopping for a feeder, consider those with bee or wasp guards, which are plastic mesh covers that prevent insects from reaching the nectar. Sometimes the guards can be purchased separately.

Making "nectar"​

A mixture of sugar and water — four parts water to one part sugar — makes a good nectar. Because most hummingbird feeders are red, there is no need to add red food coloring to the nectar. Be sure to clean the feeder very well to reduce the growth of bacteria, which can sicken hummingbirds. Change the nectar weekly or more often if it becomes cloudy.

CAUTION: Never use honey or artificial sweeteners!

  • Honey mixed with water can grow a dangerous fungus that will attack the birds' tongues.
  • Never use artificial sweeteners in hummingbird feeders.

When to put out feeders​

The best time to put up hummingbird feeders in Missouri is around April 25, when rubythroats return to Missouri. If you start feeding when they arrive, there is less chance of them moving on.

When to take feeders down​

Hummingbird feeding is most successful in late summer and early fall. Some people fear that feeding hummingbirds into the fall may delay their departure and expose them to freezing. There is no evidence that feeding slows their migration. September is typically the most satisfying month to feed hummingbirds. As the nights become regularly cold, rubythroats begin to migrate south. This occurs in Missouri in late September, and by October 10 the rubythroats are usually gone. That's a good time to bring in the feeders and clean them for winter storage.
 
I don't know where you're located, just Dave, or if that would factor in to anything,

But all birds including hummers, have multiple spots to feed, including all the wild natural plants and all the plants grown on people's properties, and everyone's feeders.
They're all used to competition amongst themselves, and they respond to the multiple powerful forces to migrate.

Of course if you don't enjoy feeding them, then that is fine, don't. šŸ™‚
There are lots of knowledgeable sources of info on birds, non profit organizations, such as Audubon. And universities with ornithology departments.
 
When I read that advice, I wasn't sure if it was true, but it bothered me enough to take the feeder down. I may put it back up. They are nice to look at.

Thread drift alert: Once a humming bird got into my house. I found if fluttering against the inside of my picture window. I quickly caught in in a box, and managed to close the lid. I went out to the middle of the yard and opened the box and bird shot straight up like a missile and didn't head in any other direction except in a perfect perpendicular line to the flat ground. In two seconds, maybe less, he reached an altitude of around 50 ft, or above the high pines surrounding my lawn, and suddenly shot sideways with no perceptible curve included in his departure.

I'm going suggest to NASA the next time they release sightings of UFOs demonstrating impossible flight paths that what they are seeing is sun glistening off the feathers of near by humming birds in a panic.
 
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