Bee Balm Beauties

Hummingbird season is officially here in the Northland! Unlike other parts of America, we only have one kind of hummingbird, the Ruby-Throat. If you want these gorgeous nectar sippers in your yard, there is one … and only one flower you should plant … Red Bee Balm. While we have other flowers in our perennial garden, as far as the hummers are concerned only the bee balm exists.

One preferred activity of mine during this brief season is to light the BBQ … retreat to the garden with Chardonnay in hand … and photograph Ruby-Throated Hummingbirds. When the coals are ready, I leave my garden and cook.

All these images were taken yesterday afternoon. Due to the Canadian forest fire smoke which filters direct sunlight, it was not bright enough to push the shutter speed up fast enough to stop action the hummer wings. Thus, I took a different approach. Slow the shutter down and blur the wings allowing for a lower ISO (higher quality). The end result is still nice!

A few comments … if you want to see mature males with their ruby throats, get out there now. These guys migrate south first, then the females followed by the young. In addition, if you don’t have perennials in your yard and you live in the Duluth area, visit the Hartley Nature Center. They have a great garden right outside the center. Arrive by 7:30 am such that the sun’s angle is above the trees around the garden and walk through the gate. The bees will avoid you; just move slowly.

The Star of the Show … Ruby-Throated Hummingbird. Both males checked me out from a distance of only two feet away from my head … decided I was harmless … and then proceeded to feed. If I had been standing out in the open next to the garden, they would have never fed. (note … at the Hartley Nature Center garden, many of the flowers are six feet tall … thus you do not need to sit)

Nearby purple cone flowers

Bees also love these flowers

Yours truly with Chardonnay … sitting in my yard (tall grasses and wildflowers) next to some Black-Eyed Susans

6 thoughts on “Bee Balm Beauties

  1. Thanks for your uplifting post this Sunday morning. I admire your work always but felt compelled to acknowledge it on this beautiful day where I live at Emily Minnesota. 😊
    Regards,
    Bob Haarman

  2. Yes, my red bee balm just started blooming yesterday. My hummingbirds like almost anything red. The Cardinal flower is good too, but it blooms too late up in northern Minnesota and Wisconsin. You will have hummingbirds if you plant cardinal flowers in the Twin Cities.

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