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Home & Garden > Small Pleasures
 

Small Pleasures




A tiny egg sits in small 2-inch hummingbird nest, resting on a swaying palm frond in a backyard in Mar Vista, California. (Los Angeles Times photo by Hartmut Walter.)


This wonderful story captured my heart — enjoy!




Hummingbird nest carries a reminder of small pleasures



As a chick is hatched and matures, one yard becomes a lesson in enjoying the little things




By Molly Selvin
Special to The Los Angeles Times
April 10, 2008



I've been obsessed with the hummingbirds in our yard. Mornings and evenings since late February, I've tiptoed to the palm hanging over the barbecue to see if the mother was still sitting on the 2-inch nest she built on a swaying frond.

In the first weeks, she sat nearly motionless, her beak tilted upward, stoic even through the rainstorms and the windy nights that followed. When she was not in there, I worried that she'd given up on the whole family thing. Or maybe she'd met an untimely end.

Then we glimpsed her chick, its tiny beak poking out from the nest, wide open and waiting, as my children once waited for dinner to be put before them in bite-sized pieces.

Mom would invariably be nearby, flitting between the orange blossoms and the neon-yellow plastic flowers on a feeder I bought.

In recent weeks I've shooed away errant cats and swooping crows. The hordes of squirrels seemed too busy gorging on oranges to find the little family.

Through it all I've wondered what my preoccupation with this bird and her gray chick really means. Am I still mourning the death of our beloved family dog last year? Am I missing the kids, who've mostly flown our stucco nest?

My neighbor Hartmut Walter thinks the mother is an Allen's hummingbird, noting her green back and the flash of copper on her throat. A UCLA geography professor who studies birds, Walter says the species migrated to the Los Angeles area from the Channel Islands in the 1960s, drawn by proliferating nectar plants as bean and corn fields gave way to yards like mine.

In my Mar Vista garden, the winter rains have seeded a bumper crop of dandelions. Here and there are the shriveled remains of plants that didn't take; my sweet pea vines molded before they bloomed this year. Yet my 50-by-30-foot plot has been a refuge for this tiny family. And, really, isn't a refuge what gardeners want?

Never mind the 12-story office building towering over my backyard. Or the droning traffic on the 405, four blocks away. Happiness, I read, is the ability to tune out the noise and find joy in life's small pleasures and daily miracles.

Sure, instinct, not the pursuit of happiness, drew the hummingbird to our yard. There she found tiny stems, wood chips and bits of fluff she fused with saliva and spider silk. She felt safe enough to lay two little white eggs and, like the patient elephant Horton, wait for them to hatch.

Perhaps during her first long nights she was overcome, like me, by the perfume of our yellow trumpet blooms. Maybe she took pleasure in the riotous orange of the clivia plants, or the first pink rose of the season. Simple moments of awe in the garden. And sadness. Two eggs, as I mentioned, but only one chick.

That survivor stood high in the nest late last month, nearly as big as its mother, watchful and ready to fly.

The nest is empty now. Perhaps the fledgling is among the hummers still darting through my garden. Maybe we'll even find another nest in our trees this year.

The economy stumbles and fighting in Iraq grinds on. But it's easy to escape to our gardens, spring pulling us out the back door each morning.




posted on Apr 10, 2008 11:12 AM ()

Comments:

I missed this post. This is beautiful!
comment by dragonflyby on July 15, 2008 9:39 AM ()
How good to have a glimpse into the private family life of a hummingbird family.You are indeed blessed!
comment by thestephymore on June 29, 2008 5:05 PM ()
Exquisite. I don't see them much down here, only occasionally.
comment by teacherwoman on Apr 11, 2008 2:01 PM ()
BRAVO!!! Loved that story!
comment by jerms on Apr 11, 2008 7:46 AM ()
I have three feeders in my Magnolia tree that the hummingbirds visit every year. If I am late in getting out my nectar, they come to the front window to remind me--as if I needed reminding!
comment by angiedw on Apr 10, 2008 5:31 PM ()
Hummingbirds are the most amazing little creatures and their eggs are soooo very small. I like their curiosity. They often hover right in front of a person's face... invading our personal space... and just seem to check us out. Or maybe... that is their way of saying, "Hello dear friend, sure glad to meet you."

I've been cruising around on mybloggers today and see there are several springtime posts. I'm enjoying all of them, including yours. Thanks for posting it.

Annie :o)
comment by anniel on Apr 10, 2008 2:47 PM ()
I get hummingbirds, but I've never seen a nest. Thanks for sharing this story.
comment by solitaire on Apr 10, 2008 12:29 PM ()
my sister has hummingbirds come to her yard every year. she is anxiously awaiting their return in May. this is a beautiful story martha!
comment by elkhound on Apr 10, 2008 11:50 AM ()
I miss my CA hummers. I had six feeders and made my own juice.
comment by jondude on Apr 10, 2008 11:18 AM ()

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