
June 6, 2026
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In early summer, ruby-throated hummingbirds navigate newly leafed territories to locate spreading dogbane flowers, a reliable nectar source during their nesting season.
The air holds the weight of early summer heat near Wexford, thick with the hum of insects and the longer light that stretches past eight o'clock. In the understory where shade pools beneath American elm and eastern hemlock, a different sound cuts through the ambient buzz. The ruby-throated hummingbird moves like a needle through fabric, stitching between territories with purpose that becomes clear only when it stops.
Spreading dogbane blooms now in loose clusters along woodland edges and clearings, each flower a small pink bell that opens downward. The plant grows knee-high, its oval leaves arranged in pairs along reddish stems that branch and spread as the name suggests. What draws the hummingbird is not the plant's architecture but its timing. Dogbane flowers produce nectar consistently through the longest days when hummingbirds are feeding both themselves and their nestlings. The flowers open in sequence, not all at once, extending the nectar flow across weeks rather than days.
The hummingbird approaches each flower cluster with precision born of necessity. Its bill, slightly curved and longer than its head, fits exactly into the narrow corolla tube where nectar pools. The bird hovers for seconds at each bloom, its wings beating eighty times per second to maintain position while its tongue, forked and capable of extending well beyond the bill tip, pumps nectar at thirteen licks per second. This is not casual feeding. A female with nestlings must visit up to two thousand flowers daily to meet her energy needs and those of her young. Dogbane provides reliable fuel during the most demanding weeks of the breeding season.
The relationship runs deeper than simple nectar exchange. Dogbane flowers are designed for specific pollinators, their narrow tubes and downward orientation excluding most insects while accommodating the hummingbird's feeding style. As the bird feeds, pollen adheres to the feathers around its head and bill. When it moves to the next cluster, often on a different plant, it carries genetic material between populations that might otherwise remain isolated. The plant benefits from this mobile pollination service, while the hummingbird gains access to a nectar source that blooms when others have finished or have not yet begun. In territories where dogbane is abundant, hummingbirds establish smaller feeding ranges, spending less energy traveling between flowers and more energy raising young.
Listen for the distinctive wing-whir that announces the hummingbird's approach, a sound unlike any other in these woods. Watch for the flash of emerald back and white breast as it pauses at the pale pink bells that nod from their stems. The longest light of the year illuminates this daily exchange, bird and flower synchronized in the precise timing that makes both possible.