One of Explore.org's most popular web cams is a hummingbird nest. Every year, hundreds of fans
pass by bear cams, sheep cams, dog cams, and even aurora cams to spend virtual time in a backyard in California watching hummingbirds feed, bathe, lay their eggs, and raise young. Hummingbirds are popular.
They're also, like all of our other pollinators, endangered.
Author and naturalist Sy Montgomery writes movingly of her experience helping an expert wildlife rehabilitator raise a pair of Allen's hummingbirds, left in the nest by their mother at only days old (the mother likely was killed). The homeowner who discovered this tragic situation rushed the nest and its rapidly declining occupants to rescue, and Brenda Sherburne La Belle and her husband Russ took over the care of the littles, joined a few days later by Sy, who flew in from her home in New Hampshire.
Fostering hummingbirds is intense, and Sy describes every feature of the process as she helps with the endless work. Baby hummers have to be fed every 20 minutes, a syringe delivering a solution of nectar and crushed fruit flies down their gullets into their bellies. The babies are tiny - the nest is the size of golfball - and so the quantity of food must be carefully measured. As the little ones grow, they can become fractious; born about two days apart, one is larger than the other, and in this case the larger one booted the smaller one out of the nest. Luckily Brenda hoards used nests and simply moved the smaller hummer into its own new home.
There is much drama - they eat, they don't eat, they're attacked by mites, and when it comes time to move out into the world, the two babies, named Maya and Zuni, find out that the other members of their species are highly aggressive. Fortunately Brenda, over the years, developed a system of slowly moving them out into the real world that gives them enough safety to explore their freedom. Finally, the day comes when they join the migration to spend winter in Mexico with the rest of their species.
Along with the story of Maya and Zuni, Montgomery interweaves a lot of information about hummingbirds, and the book is beautifully illustrated with color photos of many species of these flying jewels. The book is short - it can easily be read in a sitting - but it's beautiful and brings new appreciation not only for hummingbirds but the people who love them.