When you order First Nature’s Stackable Hummingbird Feeder you’ll receive two individual feeders, attached together to hang as one unit, providing a total of 32 feeding ports. However, you may choose to separate the two individual feeders and hang them in more than one location in your yard. The red base attracts inquisitive birds and you’ll find the two-part bases make cleaning a breeze. The wide mouth of the clear reservoir makes it easy to fill and easy to clean with warm soapy water. The design of the feeding ports discourages bees and wasps. There is an ant moat built into the top of each feeder. Just fill with water before hanging and you’ll discourage ants from getting to the nectar. An “S” hook is included on each feeder for hanging. For best results use First Nature Hummingbird Nectar.
Product Features
- Wide-mouth reservior and patented two-part base is easy to fill and clean
- The durable polymer feeder features 2 feeders in one, a total of 32 feeding ports, a total of 32-ounce nectar capacity, s-hooks, built in ant moat, bee and wasp proof, and round perch design
- Innovative sealing ring aids in leak prevention
- Red base attracts inquisitive hummingbirds
- Made in the usa
Love IT The birds seem to love this feeder too. I have not determined of the top or bottom has an advantage. I even tried stacking 3 and 4 and may try this again in fall for photo opportunity.
It’s messy, hard to fill, and bigger birds like it too much. I very much like the large capacity tanks of this “hummingbird feeder.” But, that is about the only thing I like about it. As with most feeders it fills from the bottom of the tank. When you put the tank back onto the unit it takes about one third of the food into the base. Now the second time you fill it, you have two containers, the base and the tank, both filled. You must turn one upside down to screw them together – Oops! one or the other is going to spill it’s contents. The food…
The proof is in the picture. This feeder has constant traffic (shown by the picture I posted). When I had it staked right into the ground, I had an ant problem (even with the “moat” filled with water). However, I also had that problem with a different feeder so no stars off for that. My solution was to put the feeder in a large planter instead of directly into the ground. That has solved the issue. Hummingbirds love it and it’s easier to clean than the ones with the fake flowers because the flowers are porous and…