
May 22, 2026
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As Broadbeard Beardtongue flowers reach peak bloom in late spring, Broad-tailed Hummingbirds arrive to feed on nectar, establishing a critical pollination relationship that sustains both species through the nesting season. This is a moment of urgent ecological synchrony in the urban Colorado landscape.
The morning air holds the cool of late spring in Park Hill, where cottonwoods spread their new leaves and willows release clouds of pollen. Step outside if you can. Close your eyes and listen for the sound that cuts through the bird chorus: a metallic trill, sharp and insistent, followed by silence.
That trill belongs to a Broad-tailed Hummingbird (Selasphorus platycercus), and the silence is the bird hovering. Right now, as May deepens toward June, these hummingbirds are establishing territories and beginning to nest. The males arrived first from their wintering grounds in Mexico, staking out the best feeding spots. The females followed, evaluating both mates and real estate. What they both seek, urgently, are the tubular purple flowers of Broadbeard Beardtongue (Penstemon angustifolius). These native wildflowers bloom in tight synchrony with the hummingbirds' arrival, their peak flowering timed to fuel the birds' most energy-intensive season.
The beardtongue opens its flowers in clusters along tall stems, each bloom a perfect fit for a hummingbird's bill and tongue. The flower's architecture excludes most other visitors. Bees cannot reach the nectar at the base of the long tube. Butterflies lack the hovering precision the narrow opening demands. But a Broad-tailed Hummingbird approaches each flower like a key finding its lock. The bird inserts its needle-thin bill deep into the tube, its forked tongue flicking out to lap nectar from the base. As it feeds, pollen dusts the crown of its head and the base of its throat. When the hummingbird visits the next beardtongue, that pollen transfers, completing the exchange that has sustained both species across thousands of springs.
This partnership operates on precision timing. The beardtongue cannot afford to bloom too early, when late frosts might kill the flowers, or too late, when the hummingbirds have already committed to other nectar sources. The hummingbirds cannot arrive before their primary fuel appears, but they also cannot wait too long, or the best nesting sites will be taken by competitors. Female Broad-tailed Hummingbirds are building their nests now, gathering spider silk and plant down, shaping cups barely larger than a walnut. Each nest represents thousands of trips to beardtongue flowers, each feeding bout converting nectar into the energy needed to incubate eggs and feed young. The beardtongue, in turn, depends on this intensive visitation. Other pollinators visit sporadically, but hummingbirds work systematically, moving from flower to flower within a patch, then traveling between patches, ensuring genetic diversity in the plant's reproduction.
Look for the beardtongue in open areas where the soil drains well, its purple spikes rising above shorter grasses. Listen for the hummingbird's trill, often heard before the bird is seen. If you spot the flash of metallic green and the ruby throat of a male, watch how it moves between flowers. The feeding is methodical, efficient, each visit lasting only seconds before the bird moves on. The sound of its wings shifts as it hovers, a higher pitch than the trill of its territorial call, steady as a small motor running in the morning air.