<h2 id="c4">EXPERIENCES WITH “HUMMERS.”</h2>
<p>Did you ever hold a live hummingbird
in your hand? Well, I have held several
of the wee, wee creatures. Did you ever
look into a hummingbird’s nest? Well,
I have peeped into several of the tiny,
downy affairs.</p>
<p>Two of the nests contained eggs; one
contained young birds. The eggs were
as small as an ordinary garden pea—perfectly
egg-shaped. Can I describe the
young of the hummingbird? No, impossible.
I can only say that they are the
smallest animal I ever saw in all my
life. Of course, that does not include
the insect world.</p>
<p>How did I contrive to get hold of a
live hummingbird? Easy enough when
you know how.</p>
<p>One hot afternoon in June I was sitting
in a garden reading. A few yards
away stood a large bunch of brilliant carnations.
Now, if there is anything which
a hummer fairly dotes on it is pinks.
Suddenly I heard a loud hum near by.
I looked toward the carnations, and, sure
enough, there were too hummingbirds
hovering around the flowers.</p>
<p>I watched their movements for several
moments with great interest. Presently
I observed that one of the birds appeared
to be entangled. Its tongue, or long,
needle-like beak, was caught in some
manner in the petals of a large pink. The
little fellow kept fluttering around in a
helpless way, but could not liberate itself.</p>
<p>Instantly I dropped the book and ran
over to the bed. The other hummingbird
darted away like a shot. I very softly
took the tiny prisoner in my hand and
then gently liberated it. For half a minute
or more I held the trembling, fluttering
creature in my hand. I wish I could
describe the beauty and brilliancy of its
plumage. Silk, velvet and the delicate
tints of the rainbow are the only adequate
words. Finally I released the prisoner.
In a flash he was out of sight.</p>
<p>One good fright was enough. Neither
bird ever came back to the carnations
again. At least, the pinks were not visited
by any more hummingbirds that season.</p>
<p>Last summer I was out with a fishing
party. We went far back into the
mountains, where it was rugged, wild
and lonely. One day I was out fishing
along a rushing torrent. There was a
deep, swirling eddy where I was angling,
and just on the bank stood a small cedar
tree. A long, slender limb hung only a
few feet above my head.</p>
<p>While I was fishing a hummingbird
came buzzing around my head. It kept
circling around me for some time. Finally
I stopped fishing. Instantly the
bird alighted on a twig and eyed me closely
with its bright bead-like eye. A moment
later the little mate arrived.</p>
<p>“Surely there must be a nest near by,”
I said to myself. Then I began fishing.</p>
<p>Both birds immediately came whirring
about my ears like two hornets. They
kept it up until I desisted. Then both
alighted and watched me sharply. Again
and again I tried to fish, but the little
creatures would give me no peace.</p>
<p>Down I laid my rod and began to look
carefully for a nest. Sure enough, there
was one concealed amidst the cedar
boughs. It was right above my head
where I stood fishing. Very gently I
pulled the pendent branch down until I
could peep into the thimble of a nest,
which contained beautiful eggs. Meantime
the birds kept buzzing around my
head in a most distracted manner.</p>
<p>Having satisfied my curiosity I quietly
withdrew, to the evident delight of the
little parents.</p>
<p>On another occasion I was out in an
orchard. I noticed two hummingbirds
flying around a certain apple tree limb.
As I approached the birds became more
excited. When within a few yards of the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span>
tree I noticed a young bird sitting on a
nest. He was almost grown. Not wishing
to frighten the little chap, I stopped
abruptly. But he darted away. However,
his wings were too weak, and down
he sank fluttering, falling into a big tuft
of tall grass.</p>
<p>He was perfectly helpless, so I very
tenderly picked him up and placed him
back on the nest. To my surprise and
amusement he did not attempt to escape,
but stood up boldly and looked at me in
a saucy, defiant way. The parent birds
were buzzing around me like angry bees,
but when they saw that I did not harm
their offspring they both alighted near
the nest.</p>
<p>A large clump of wild currants stood
in one corner of the yard. I noticed two
hummingbirds almost constantly hovering
around the bush among the large yellow
flowers.</p>
<p>I went out one afternoon and secreted
myself in the clump, in order to observe
more closely the actions and peculiarities
of the birds. One was the largest hummingbird
I had ever seen, and its plumage
was simply gorgeous.</p>
<p>Soon the birds came around, but they
did not seem in the least alarmed by my
presence. The larger one came very near,
and actually flew against my face. I held
up my hand, when the bird flew straight
into it. I instantly closed my fingers and
held him a prisoner. His plumage was
brilliant beyond description. As the beautiful
captive did not seem to resent my
familiarity, I examined his coat carefully
before giving the bird its freedom.</p>
<p>I had still another experience with a
hummer. On a bright summer day one
flew through an open door into a room
where I was sitting. Quick as a flash the
bird discovered its mistake. It dashed
against a window pane with all its might
and dropped on the floor. I hastily picked
it up. It seemed quite dead. But as I
held it in my open hand, silently sympathizing
over its fate, the bird suddenly
revived and flitted out through the open
door before I could wink.</p>
<p><span class="lr"><span class="sc">J. Mayne Baltimore.</span></span></p>
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