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Fastest Things on Wings

Page 28

by Terry Masear


  Powder slept in the ficus tree every night for three weeks, then every other night for about a week, and then finally gained the confidence to make a total transition to the wild. Her continuing presence in rehab that summer served as a powerful reminder that anybody, regardless of education and experience, can be seduced by the beauty and charm of a hummingbird. In late September, I saw the agile little flier filling up at the sugar feeder for what turned out to be the last time before her autumn migration to Mexico.

  Pepper hung around the patio sugar feeders for a few weeks after her release but never retreated back into the aviary. Occasionally she buzzed me in the mornings when I came out to fill the feeders, but, to my infinite satisfaction, she never let me get too close. Then one day she too was gone, perhaps returning to her film career in Los Feliz. I never saw Gabriel again. He already knew his way around town, so I expect he went back to the prime real estate he had staked out in Beverly Hills before he’d returned to be saved by me, and with me, for a second time. And even though I have not seen Gabriel since our long summer together, I hold on to the memory. And if I ever do run into him again, Gabriel will be easy to recognize. He’s the one with the white spot, the magical third eye that gave me a glimpse into that bright and shining realm that belongs wholly to hummingbirds.

  In the summer of 2008, after releasing the last group of adults, I received only one more bird. Julie, who identified herself as an eagle rehabber, called in late September and asked if she could bring me an orphaned fledgling. Although I had gone back to teaching and hadn’t gotten any hummingbirds for two months, I was happy to take him. In the ensuing conversation, Julie, who used to live in Los Angeles, explained that she was bringing me a young black-chinned who, thanks to an early-fall snowstorm in Idaho, could not be released until the following spring. Since making the fifteen-hour drive to LA was easier than overwintering the juvenile, Julie and her husband decided to use the hummingbird as an excuse to visit old friends in the city.

  Several days later they showed up with a spirited black-chinned fledgling and a handful of paperwork from Idaho Fish and Wildlife granting permission to transport the little powerhouse over state lines. I caged the excitable male in the garage for the night and then put him into the aviary the next morning, intending to leave him there for at least a week until he got his bearings. Because of his late arrival, I wanted to keep him until he became comfortable using a sugar feeder, since flowers are in short supply by the end of September. But when I came out to check on him the first afternoon in the aviary, he was hanging upside down on the horizontal bars. Puzzled by his behavior, I slid him off the bars and let him go in the center of the aviary, but he returned to the same spot and began banging against the bars. Concerned that his long, interstate car trip may have been disorienting, I slid him off the bars again and attempted to distract him by letting him go near a fresh bouquet of honeysuckle strategically positioned in the back of the aviary. When I came out ten minutes later and found him in the same agitated state, hanging nearly upside down on the bars with his tail sticking outside, I realized he was pointing straight south, as if being physically pulled from the aviary by a magnetic force beyond his control. That same primal energy, indefinable and defying description, compels billions of migratory creatures to run, swim, and fly up and down the planet every spring and fall in pursuit of an end we can never fully comprehend. After watching the distraught fledgling cling to the bars with his tiny feet as his tail strained farther outside the aviary, I reluctantly opened the doors and invited him out. The second he cleared the threshold, he streaked thirty feet into the air and then headed south over the Beverly Center on his way to Mexico. And while his swift departure brought a wave of relief that the long rehab season had finally come to a close, it also left me cautiously bracing for the next call, another hummingbird, and a rapidly approaching spring.

  Acknowledgments

  WHILE WRITING A BOOK can be a lonely affair, rescuing hummingbirds is never a solitary pursuit. Before this book became an idea, Ann Lynch already invested several years helping to fund my rescue efforts through her nonprofit, South Bay Wildlife Rehabilitation. In addition to her, I would like to thank the California Wildlife Center and Linda Lindsay for their enduring commitment to rehabilitating the hundreds of helpless young hummingbirds I send their way each year.

  My deepest appreciation goes out to my agent, Felicia Eth, for her unwavering faith and resolve that brought this work to publication, and to Lisa White and Tracy Roe, whose editorial expertise and laserlike precision in fine-tuning the manuscript motivated me to make this book all that I had hoped it would become. Thanks also for the contributions of Beth Burleigh Fuller, Brian Moore, Laney Everson, Taryn Roeder, Katrina Kruse, and the rest of the team at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.

  Many thanks go out to Douglas Altshuler, Chris Clark, and George C. West for generously sharing their original research, which has led to remarkable insights into the mysteries of hummingbird flight, breeding, and migration. And to Brian E. Small for capturing these miniature miracles with his brilliant photography. A special thanks to Sara Michele, Rocky Stickel, and Steve Diggins for donating their colorful and poignant photos of wild and rescued hummingbirds.

  I want to express my appreciation to the Bella Hummingbird live webcam for educating people all over the world about hummingbird breeding and nesting habits and for spreading valuable information aimed at advancing our rescue efforts. Also, many thanks to China Adams for creating the original website that provided a fast connection to the public, making it possible to save countless young hummingbirds at a moment’s notice.

  Finally, I want to extend my gratitude to all of my friends who have offered support and assistance during my years of rescuing and writing about hummingbirds. Heartfelt thanks to Lily Sheen for her guidance and encouragement that inspired me to finish this book far sooner than I could have imagined. And to Ashley Herman, for all of the orphaned chicks she shuttled to my doorstep when I was too stretched to retrieve them myself. Also, thanks to Tara Neuwirth for giving me the flexibility to take time off from teaching over the years to save thousands of hummingbirds. A million thanks to Cameron, Yuko, and Alexandra Wood for graciously allowing my rescue project to overflow into their backyard and for being there to prop up an exhausted rehabber at all hours. My sincere gratitude goes out to my sister, Victoria Masear, for her generous support and steady supply of information on eastern hummingbirds; Dick Willis for his consistently levelheaded advice on human nature; Tom Shinmoto for his insights on all things Japanese; José Aguilar for his enlightening American Spanish lessons; Gail Borden and Kyle Voorheis for their photographic contributions to the website; and Dave and Eva Schwartz for always being there, no matter when or what the request.

  Since saving hummingbirds requires a community, I want to thank all of the compassionate Southern California hummingbird finders for their willingness to invest the time and energy to deliver their precious rescues to facilities where they can be rehabilitated and released back into the City of Angels.

  And, most of all, to my loving husband, Frank; although I know you don’t want me to mention it, none of this would have been possible without you and our demanding crew of cats who, despite staging regular protests over being ignored, have sat up late with us, night after night, waiting to see how it all ends.

  Index

  abandoned-nest calls (false alarms), 101–5, 111–12, 215, 225–26

  Allen’s hummingbirds

  breeding season/courtship display, 57, 58, 59–60, 61–62

  changes in numbers/rehab numbers (Los Angeles area), 56–58

  double-/triple-brooding and, 57–58

  hybridization, 57, 220

  iridescent patches (males), 154

  migration/residence and, 58

  nest colors, 8

  Altshuler, Douglas, 136–37

  Anna’s hummingbirds

  breeding areas, 123

  changes in rehab numbers, 57

 
courtship display, 45, 62–64

  global population estimates, 123

  hybridization, 220

  iridescent patches (males), 154

  lower/higher elevations and, 137

  migration, 123

  nest colors, 8

  nesting areas, 56, 123

  Apache legends, 97

  “awesome,” 285

  Aztec legends, 97

  bananas and fruit flies, 84–87

  banding

  longevity information, 286–87

  migration information, 122, 123, 125, 127–28

  same-date recaptures, 127–28

  Bass, Fontella, 214

  Bishop, Helen, 56–57, 142

  black-chinned hummingbirds

  changes in rehab numbers, 57

  description, 226

  iridescent patches (males), 154

  migration, 123

  nest colors, 8

  nesting in Los Angeles area, 56

  Blacktop/Masear connection, 173, 202–4

  Blake, William, 285

  Bobo (cat) walks on leash, 279

  body heat and hummingbirds, 90

  Brad

  learning true gender of, 163

  Masear’s physical therapy for, 158–59, 174

  reluctance to leave aviary and, 160, 161, 163, 164, 165, 244

  rescue/rehabilitation, 157–59, 160, 161, 163, 164, 174

  breeding

  description, 63

  mid-June and, 204–5

  vs. pair-bonding, 58

  return to birthplace, 122

  See also courtship display

  broad-tailed hummingbirds

  in rehab, 160–61, 162, 163, 173

  in wild, 56, 61, 137, 287

  brown sugar twins, 110–17, 119

  calliope hummingbirds, 56

  cats

  bacteria in saliva and, 156

  hummingbirds and, 156, 183–84

  kitten rescue, 227–29, 279

  of Masear, 23, 52–53, 186–87, 219, 228, 256, 260, 262, 263, 267, 268, 279

  chi and hummingbird releases, 282

  Chucky’s aggression/bullying, 117–19, 137, 152, 242

  circadian rhythms, 182

  Clark, Chris, 62

  coadaptation/coevolution, 19–20, 98

  compassion fatigue, 48

  Cooper’s hawk and hummingbirds, 161–62

  Costa’s hummingbirds, 56, 103, 156

  courtship display

  Allen’s, 58, 59–60

  Anna’s, 45, 62–64

  dive speeds, 62–63

  iridescence/gorget and, 60

  rufous, 58, 59–60

  shuttle display, 58

  sound production/tail feathers, 59–60

  stormy weather and, 45, 63–64, 65–66

  war dance/intimidating males vs., 60, 62

  crop

  feeding formula into crop, 147

  mother hummingbird feeding babies and, 146–47

  siphoning in rehabilitation, 36–37, 114

  deaths of hummingbirds

  effects on humans/examples, 39–42, 49, 79–80, 271–73

  Masear’s first loss/effects, 34–39, 42, 47–48, 271, 272

  rehabbers and, 49, 80

  Descartes, René, 182

  diatomaceous earth, 190, 191

  diet/eating by hummingbirds

  ants/problems, 34–39, 113

  brown sugar twins/problems, 110–15

  food people fed birds/problems, 34–39, 111–15, 221

  fruit flies, 77, 84–87

  hatchlings yolk sac and, 83

  people planting nectar-producing vegetation, 81–82

  rehabilitation protein formula and, 34, 35, 46, 55, 67, 94, 114, 125–27, 143, 147, 151, 154, 174, 201, 202, 204, 211, 212, 223, 233, 234, 241, 248, 261, 263

  rescuer feeding all night, 9–11

  See also fruit flies; sugar water/feeders

  dog-found hummingbirds, 64–65, 156, 190, 275, 276

  ducklings rescue/Masear’s reaction, 212–15, 217–18

  eating. See diet/eating by hummingbirds

  egg-bound female hummingbird, 253–54, 259, 261

  eggs vs. hatched hummingbirds rescues, 40–41

  “failure to thrive,” 145

  false memories of people (hummingbirds), 97, 98–100

  feeders. See sugar water/feeders

  fire stations and hummingbirds, 250

  flight of hummingbirds

  Cal Tech research engineer on, 138

  deconstruction of, 135–36

  dive speeds, 62–63, 138

  fledglings learning, 20

  flying up and, 18

  hovering and, 135, 136, 138

  lift/studies, 135–37

  Masear imagining, 288–89

  power at lower/higher elevations, 136–37

  power output and, 136

  progression in rehabilitation (overview), 139–40

  speeds, 63

  studies using digital particle image velocimetry/results, 135–36

  See also wings of hummingbirds

  food. See diet/eating by hummingbirds

  fossils of hummingbirds, 98

  Fourth of July and hummingbirds, 84, 232, 235, 239

  fruit flies

  Blacktop and, 203

  decomposing bananas and, 84–85, 85–87

  hummingbird young learning to catch, 85–86

  in hummingbirds diet, 77, 84–87

  people catching, 85

  Gabriel (hummingbird)

  courtship, 45, 63–64

  injury/accident, 44, 45, 46

  as previous rainstorm rescue/Anna’s with white spot, 23–25, 26, 27–29, 120–22, 180, 257, 292

  rescue, 44–47, 52–53, 54

  return to birthplace/breeding, 122, 125

  Gabriel (hummingbird) rehabilitation

  activities/lack of activities, 175, 180, 188–89, 235, 246

  in aviary/leaving aviary with Pepper, 275, 277, 278, 280, 281–82, 289

  back injury/posture and, 175, 180, 189

  bath, 92–93, 95

  dirt/grime and, 44, 67, 92, 93

  feathers color/gorget, 120–21

  first hours, 44, 45, 46, 54–55, 67–68

  flight success, 266–67, 274

  food/feeding, 44, 55, 67, 89, 92, 182

  identifying/using syringe feeder, 92

  in large flight cage with Pepper, 274–75

  Masear’s thoughts/emotions with, 180–81

  Pepper and, 221, 241, 243, 246, 266

  reassurance from Masear, 188–89

  rufous twins and, 180

  starter cage/sun and, 91–92, 98, 110

  torpor and, 90, 91

  warming, 44, 45, 46, 55

  Gabriel (person)

  description, 44, 53

  rescue of hummingbird, 44–47, 52–53, 54

  gender differences in rehabilitation, 234–35

  head injury symptoms, 69

  Hopi legends, 97

  Housman, A. E., 49

  hummingbird colors

  iridescence, 60, 96–97, 154, 280

  males vs. females/young, 97

  South American/southwestern U.S., 97

  hummingbird personalities

  brown-sugar twins, 115–16

  bullying by hummingbirds, 117–19, 137, 151–52, 242–43

  harassing larger birds, 140–41

  as unique, 110, 115–19

  Hummingbird Rescue website, 64

  Hummingbird Study Group (Sargent), 127–28

  hummingbirds

  attraction to red, 248–49, 250

  brains/intelligence of, 116

  coexisting with people and, 75

  competition and, 61

  determining age and, 125, 131–32

  family (classification), 96

  flashes of light meaning, 78

  flower colors/attraction and, 19–20, 280

  in Greater Los Angeles area, 56–57, 75

&nbs
p; heart rate/beats, 90, 286

  heart size, 90

  honeysuckle and, 19–20

  hybridization, 57, 220

  longevity, 286–87

  metabolism, 90–91

  Old World fossils, 98

  prehistoric origins, 140

  range today, 97

  size comparisons, 123

  spatial memory precision, 128–29

  species numbers in Americas/U.S., 56–57

  weight, 140, 234

  hummingbirds in culture/human imagination

  affection for humans and, 100, 106

  connection/symbol, 271–72

  false memories (non-range areas), 97, 98–100

  messages from birds and, 101, 107–9

  Native Americans and, 97

  spirit animals/totems and, 106

  spirit of departed relative and, 97, 101, 108

  sugar water/feeders oddities, 101

  See also deaths of hummingbirds

  hybrid from UCLA botanical gardens, 220, 240, 246, 247, 275, 291

  hybridization, 57, 220

  iridescence

  cause of, 96–97

  courtship display and, 60

  description/hummingbird stage of life and, 154

  Iris

  maternal caring/mentoring, 167–68, 171–73

  release/after release, 172–73

  rescue, 167

  Iris in Homer’s The Iliad, 173

  Iron Mike

  injury/background, 275–77

  in rehabilitation/leaving, 247, 277–78, 280, 289

  rufous male and, 277–78

  Keats, John, 200

  Keynes, John Maynard, 224

  Kitchenheimer’s disease, 201

  Kübler-Ross stages of grief, 268–69

  La Brea Tar Pits, 64–65

  Lao Tzu/counsel, 50–51, 152, 179, 181, 211, 217, 231, 239–40, 253, 280, 281–82, 285

  laws and hummingbirds, 110–11, 114, 168, 169, 240, 268

  Los Angeles Hummingbird Rescue, 76

  Los Angeles Times, 193, 263

  Masear, Terry

  animals that bond and, 199–200

  cats of, 23, 52–53, 186–87, 219, 228, 256, 260, 262, 263, 267, 268, 279

 

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