
Attract Hummingbirds with Our Easy Homemade DIY Nectar Recipe
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I clean my feeders with hot water & an old toothbrush, sometimes with a drip of dawn, sometimes in the dishwasher. Always rinse a lengthy time with hot water. I wouldn't drink bleach any more than dawn detergent. That remark in the article about don't use anything you wouldn't drink makes me hope the author doesn't drink bleach. Yowza.
I use Dawn to wash my feeders, every few days. I use a brush and rinse well. The commercial for Dawn, leads you to believe it is safe.
Is this not so?
So true about the fighting. I have 3 feeders and 3 hummingbirds and they still squabble.
Dawn makes many different types of soap now. Most have a lot of toxic cleaning chemicals in them. If you can find Dawn Pure Essentials, it would be the safest of their lineup for cleaning food containers. It has no dyes or phosphate (it's a pale yellow color liquid).
In my opinion, it's unfortunate that our government does not require manufacturers of cleaning products put the full list of ingredients on labels. I hope that changes soon. I use either Dr. Bonners real Castile soap or Mrs. Meyers natural soaps every day for cleaning dishes, cooking utensils, etc. Old fashion real soap is a natural cleaner, disinfectant, sanitizer. No need for all the toxic forever chemicals added to today's cleaning products.
I use hot water and that's it to clean it. I use bottled water to fill the feeder.
I don't set out feeders because I have a heavily landscaped acre with all sorts of flowers and about 100 Rose of Sharons. The hummers seem to prefer the Rose of Sharons to all the other flowers. But I have seen them on some of the annuals like zinnias, too.
I use a quart jar for mixing nectar (1 cup sugar and fill jar with cold water and shake until dissolved) have 5 feeders hanging in front of sun porch and 1 hanging outside kitchen windows in the rear and have 25-35 hummingbirds every year. Love watching and feeding them
I have a feeder in the front yard and one in the back yard...they still squabble...
I thoroughly enjoyed viewing the many different Hummingbirds. I will most certainly purchase a Hummingbird feeder and plaace it out in my back yard. Thank You for all the informative facts conerning this type of bird.
I lived for 12 years in Deep South Texas, on the migratory route for several varieties of hummingbirds. At the peak of the migration, I used a gallon of nectar DAILY in my six feeders that attracted dozens & dozens of hummers.
I advise buying feeders that can be disassembled and are dishwasher safe. The dishwasher water, I found, was hotter than anything I could tolerate by hand washing. My feeders were very clean by doing this.
If you have bottle-type feeders, do invest in a couple bottle brushes, to scrub any nasty stuff that sometimes grows in the feeder.
I'll certainly keep those facts about cleaning the Hummingbird feeder.