! 1 8 RUBY- THR OA TED HUMMINGBIRD. 



Ruby-throated Hummingbird: Trochilns colubris. 



Length 3^ inches. 



Upper parts shining green; throat metallic ruby-red. 

 Female, without red throat. 



Resident (common) from April 25 to September; winters 

 from southern Florida to Central America. 



" Was it a gem half bird? 



Or was it a bird half gem?" 



The poet's questions seem to suggest this exquisite 

 little creature better than prosy facts as to color and 

 size; and indeed, if we see it only when it comes flash- 

 ing about our honeysuckle and weigelia bushes 

 poising an instant on unseen wings before each dainty 

 blossom we can scarcely believe that it has the same 

 matter-of-fact existence as other birds. But that tiny 

 body holds as many joys, hopes, and fears as any of 

 its larger brothers, and it holds also an intense devo- 

 tion to the loveliest and smallest nest in Birdland. 



It is often the bird's anxiety about her nest that 

 enables you to find it. Walking through the woods 

 you will perhaps be startled by a loud humming noise 

 circling your head, and then you may see a Humming- 

 bird light, uttering a sharp little chip which is her only 

 speech. By this you will know that the nest is near, 

 and you need only look over the rather high, slender 

 branches in the vicinity to discover it. It is possibly 

 an inch and a half in diameter and saddled to a limb 

 about the same thickness. It is composed of plant 

 down, most skillfully felted together, and the outside 

 is so beautifully stuccoed with lichens that it looks ex- 

 actly like a knot on the limb; inside it is scarcely 

 larger than a thimble, and contains two pearly eggs 

 unmarred by spot or line. 



The beautiful Sphinx moth, which also feeds from 



