The Hummer/Bird Study Group
Heating A Winter Hummingbird
Feeder
Adult male Anna's Hummingbird
(Photo © HBSG, Inc.) |
Based on 20 years of studying and banding wintering
hummingbird species in the eastern United States, here are my recommendations
for preventing the contents of hummingbird feeders from freezing. My
personal recommendation is to continue to fill your feeders with the
widely accepted mix of four parts water to one part regular table sugar
(4 to 1). A mixture of 3 to 1, water to sugar, is probably not harmful
but it may lead down that slippery slope of ever-stronger mixes that
probably are not useful and may in fact be less than desirable for
hummingbirds. Note that a 4 to 1 mix begins freezing when the
temperatures drop to the 26-27 degree Fahrenheit range. At and
below these temperatures, the fluid will likely become somewhat slushy. Hummingbirds
will still feed on slushy sugar water at temperatures even lower. One
option to prevent freezing is bring the feeder in at night and put
it out again before dawn the next morning. While this works fine
if you are a dedicated, stay-at-home early-riser, this system
is however, full of dismal failures, such as sleeping late, forgetting,
sickness, vacations, etc. Plus, the feeder will promptly freeze
again as soon as it is placed outside on mid-20's or lower mornings. Needless
to say this is not my favorite option.
The most successful option is to use a 150-watt outside flood
or spot lamp in a clip-on utility light fixture. The lamp needs
to be one of the shatterproof lamps like those that most of us have
under the eaves of our homes. The glass on these "bulbs" is usually
a Pyrex type glass. They will not shatter when they are hot in
cases where cold rain or snow splashes on them. The fixture is
a handyman type, with an 8" to 12" aluminum reflector with a lamp socket
in the center of the reflector. The reflector part will swivel
to adjust the angle of the lamp. It is equipped with a 6 foot
long plug-in cord. The fixture has a spring handle that opens
the gripping jaws when squeezed. The jaws will close allowing
the fixture to close on many different surfaces when your grip is released
on the handle. The spring-loaded jaws will affix easily to a
shepherd's hook, deck railing, hanger wire, plant arbor, any protruding
wood or metal surface etc. I recommend that the face of the "heat
lamp" be placed so that it is 10" to 12" from the feeder "bottle". This
arrangement can easily be turned on and off at the fixture or by unplugging
the cord. If you use an extension cord to reach the "pigtail" cord
on the light fixture, I suggest that you plug the fixture cord into
your extension cord, then place that connection in a ziplock type baggie
and tape it closed to make it more waterproof.
Finally, another method you may wish to try is
to use a 3-foot long plumbers heat tape. These flexible electric
tapes resemble a flat extension cord and can be easily wrapped and
taped to many types and shapes of hummingbird feeders. Most heat
tapes are equipped with a built-in thermostat in the cord that
will energize when the air temperature approaches 40 degrees F. The
wattage on these tapes is very low and the cost of operation is minimal.
If you have any questions about maintaining a
winter hummingbird feeder, you may e-Mail us at RubyThroat@aol.com. |