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Everyone seems to love hummingbirds around their garden except me. They buzz all around my Lillies and destroy them.

I feel like poisoning them.

2006-11-27 08:33:12 · 14 answers · asked by Anonymous in Home & Garden Garden & Landscape

The are indeed damaging my flowers. I see them on my porch knocking the petals off of the lillies with their bodies.

2006-11-27 16:00:41 · update #1

14 answers

you could get a humming bird feeder and that might reduce the number of lillies being destroyed

2006-11-27 08:36:06 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

Hummingbirds don't do any damage to lilies. You are fortunate to have such excellent pollinators visiting your gardens, and if not for them, you wouldn't have as many blooms.

DO NOT poison anything in nature. Its wrong, and illegal to do so. Provide the hummers with a different food source and they will feed on your lilies less. I have about 200 varieties of lilies and hundreds of hummers, and I wouldn't want the birds to leave. They are a vital part of the food chain, as well as being the only way some flowers are pollinated.

I wouldn't get a cat either. They will do more damage to your garden than any little bird. The acids in their urine will damage roots, and there is nothing worse than working the soil in your garden and grabbing a cat poo.

You have a nice natural, ecologically well balanced garden.
Enjoy it!

2006-11-27 11:53:09 · answer #2 · answered by Goatfarmer 4 · 0 0

I am curious about this, I have never heard of hummingbirds destroying flowers. I suppose it could be happening though . . . However, the Lilies will normally fade after a bit and aren't real likely to hold up in wind, rain, or intense sun.

I would suggest getting cats, or growing flowers the hummers don't like. Flowers shaped like daisies are not attractive to hummingbirds.

2006-11-27 08:39:48 · answer #3 · answered by Harvest M 3 · 3 0

everyone has observed a decline in the fowl numbers this 12 months. Migration is particularly previous due. with any luck it is going to %. up. to charm to the hummingbirds positioned out a feeder utilising one million section sugar to 4 aspects water. substitute and clean the feeder each 3 days or as quickly because it gets cloudy. Plant a tree for them to perch and nest in. purchase a salvia Black and Blue, salvia coccinea 'woman in purple'. in case you could, plant some vines with vegetation that the birds appreciate. that's in basic terms a start up... there's an incredible communicate board which could assist you. community fifty 4 Hummingbird communicate board.

2016-12-29 13:59:38 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Day lilies are called that because they last one day. Hummingbirds do not even feed from day lilies or any other lily that I know of.... I have dozens of varieties that bloom all summer and have never seen a hummingbird near one....my hummingbirds are on my butterfly bushes and the feeders. Besides that if they are feeding from anything they are pollinating and if your flowers do not get pollinated they won't bloom next time...

2006-11-27 18:34:06 · answer #5 · answered by ronibuni 3 · 0 0

Never heard of them destroying lillies. Maybe you have slugs. If you notice a shiny slime trail, you have slugs.

Don't poison hummingbirds, besides being just plain cruel, it's also illegal.

2006-11-27 08:41:18 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

What kind of lillies? Because some lillies only last one day -- maybe it's not the birds? They are such tiny things, I can't imagine them making much impact.

2006-11-27 08:41:26 · answer #7 · answered by marie 7 · 0 0

hello : well get an hummingbird feeder because it will keep them
away from your flowers aslo buy that at local homedepo
http://www.homedepogardensupplycenter.com or see http://www.hummingbirdfeeders.com great idea for outdoor patios too !

2006-11-27 08:49:08 · answer #8 · answered by toddk57@sbcglobal.net 6 · 0 0

hummingbirds are good for plants. as long as you have flowers, they'll be around. try surrounding your yard with feeders

2006-11-27 13:06:35 · answer #9 · answered by magerk 3 · 0 0

Please don't poison nature. Consider hanging several hummingbird feeders around your yard away from your flowers.

2006-11-27 08:44:03 · answer #10 · answered by curiousgeorge 5 · 0 0

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