
Several ruby-throated hummingbirds appeared at this feeder almost as soon as it was hung at a waterfront home at the Grand Lake of the Cherokees, Oklahoma, in mid-September. Hummingbirds are territorial so they all fought to make it their personal feeding station.

In 2007, there weren't many bees in my garden. This year, a "swarm" of honey bees appeared, along with carpenter bees, in my basil plants.
My enthusiasm for bees sky-rocketed last year when I discovered that I wasn’t getting any squash, because I had no bees to pollinate them. I had to do the job myself with an artist’s paintbrush. My harvest? Ten squash. I’m a terrible match-maker! It’s easier to attract bees to do the work. They know what they’re doing. They’re like match.com for fruits and vegetables.
Pollinators are essential to our food supply, and not just in our backyards. Eighty percent of the world’s food crops depend on some kind of pollinator.
I already miss the ruby-throated hummingbirds and butterflies that passed through our yard or made it their home this summer and early fall. The bees are still busy in the basil flowers, so I’m waiting to cut the plants for pesto. I’m also lazy.
My husband took down the hummingbird feeder a few days ago after not seeing “our” ruby-throated hummingbird for more than a week. The tiny bird has left Kansas City and is on his way to southern Mexico for the winter. Adios! I loved watching him come to the feeder at the window. Occasionally, a visiting hummingbird would stop at the feeder, and there would be a “dog fight” in the air as the resident bird dive bombed and chased the intruder.
I didn’t see as many butterflies this year as last. We had a colder, wetter spring, which reduced their numbers. Hopefully, their numbers will bounce back after our lush, wet summer resplendent with flowering plants.
What I really want to show you are my photographs, including those below. Don’t miss them! Be sure to click on them to get a better look. For my other posts and photographs on ruby-throated hummingbirds, butterflies, caterpillars and bees, use my search box.
Here’s a list of useful websites:
- Ruby-throated hummingbird
- About Hummingbirds
- Hummingbirds for Mom
- Birds and Blooms Magazine
- Gardenweb forums on the butterfly
- Butterfly Gardening and Conservation
- Monarch Watch, for the conservation of and education about Monarch butterflies and other pollinators
- The Pollinator Partnership

A Zebra butterfly flutters in the greenhouse at Monarch Watch at the University of Kansas. I saw a Zebra flt through my yard this year. It flashed by so quickly I almost thought it was an hallucination -- or wishing thinking.

There are 3,500 species of skipper butterflies, and they seem to be be everywhere. They aren't very flashy, though, so you might not notice them. However, these mating skippers are making a spectacle of themselves in front of the Monarch Watch building at the University of Kansas. You can't not look!

I was so excited when this female ruby-throated hummingbird stopped by our backyard for a few days to visit the cardinal flowers I planted to attract her. She and butterflies pollinated these flowers, which are already forming seeds that I can plant next year to continue the cycle.

A Cloudless Sulphur butterfly is just a blur on an aster as it flits from flower to flower in the native prairie on the Sprint World Headquarters in Overland Park, Kansas. Sixty percent of Sprint's 240-acre campus is devoted to green space, including 60 acres of prairie grass and wildflowers and seven acres of ponds and wetlands. It's a wildlife paradise.

Here's why this beautiful flowering shrub is called "Butterfly Bush." These butterflies are in the butterfly garden at Powell Gardens in Lone Jack, Missouri, east of Kansas City.
Text and photographs by Catherine Sherman, all rights reserved, October 2008.