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Home Uncategorized

How to Get a Hummingbird Out of a Garage

By: Rachel TiemeyerPosted: 5/20/21Updated: 8/31/24

This post may contain affiliate or sponsored links. Please read our disclosure policy.

A simple trick on how to get a hummingbird out of a garage. It really works! (See the comments for proof!)

Hummingbird sitting on the tines of a metal rake. this …


 

Guest post and photography by Curt Casteel (Rachel’s Dad)

Every summer a strange phenomenon takes place in many American garages:  Hummingbirds fly in, but they don’t fly out.  They will stay in there, with the door wide open, until they keel over dead.  Weird, right? 

Here’s why it happens, and how to get a hummingbird out of a garage. Time to convince your family you are a “hummingbird whisperer.”

Why Hummingbirds Fly Into Garages

A hummingbird has the metabolism of, well, a hummingbird. Since their next meal is usually found inside something colored bright red, yellow, orange, or purple, their tiny brains are programmed to seek these hues. 

Enter the Law of Unintended Consequences. The government requires every electric garage door opener to have a release handle so if it becomes stuck, you can pull this handle to manually raise and lower the door.  

If you step out into your garage and look up, you’ll see that this dangling little handle is, that’s right, RED, and shaped roughly like a trumpet vine flower.  You’re already ahead of me, aren’t you?

The unintended consequence of that red handle is that a hummingbird flies by an open garage, sees a little red “flower” inside, and zips in to investigate.  Upon finding they can’t stick their tongues inside that plastic handle for some nectar, most turn around and leave.  But a surprising number make a fatal error—they fly up. 

Regardless of the reason, once they get it in their heads that “up” is the only way out, they refuse to fly through the open door.

This ends badly.  The confused hummingbird will hover near the ceiling, searching every high corner of the room, until it has to rest, usually on the garage door track or a light fixture.  It will repeat this cycle until it is completely exhausted and dies, which can take only a few of hours.

A hand pointing to the emergency release handle in a garage.

How to Get a Hummingbird Out of a Garage

Some of you this summer will head out into the garage with the kids to go somewhere and find one of our little feathered buddies in exactly the situation I’ve described.

Stay cool.

Load the family up in the minivan, back out into the driveway, and tell them, “Watch this.”  Trot back into the garage and grab your leaf rake.  Slowly, slowly move the business end of the rake up to within just a few of inches of the hovering or resting hummingbird.

A woman holding a rake up towards a light in the garage with a hummingbird sitting on the metal tines of the rake.

Be patient.  It will, depending on its level of exhaustion, land on the tines of the rake within just a few seconds.

Then very slowly lower the rake a couple of feet and move toward the open door.  Once it sees more blue sky than garage ceiling the hummingbird will probably take off, but it might be so tired it needs to rest a minute even when you are all the way outside. 

All the more time for you to look awesome for little onlookers.

A woman holding a rake horizontally just outside her garage door as a hummingbird flies away.

Congratulations! You just saved a hummingbird’s life!

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Rachel Tiemeyer

As co-founder of Thriving Home, Rachel dreams about creating recipes (literally) and uses her husband, her 3 kids, and even the neighbors as guinea pigs several nights a week. She believes that good food has the power to bring families and friends closer together and continues to wake up excited about her job each day, even after 10+ years!

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  1. Rich says

    Posted on 2/15/22 at 8:56 pm

    Feb 15/2022 6pm. I was on the jobsite getting ready to leave. I stepped out into the garage to find this hummingbird frantically circling the lightbulb. It’s already dark out at this point. I’m trying to figure out how to help this little guy but kinda stumped. Time to hit the web. Sure enough I come across you guys. Well I can say the rake failed miserably. I followed him back and forth from lightbulb to lightbulb with a red rake no less for about 20 minutes. I got both garage doors open. I’m standing there and then it hits me. Turn off the lights and use my cell phone flashlight. It actually worked! Between that which he followed and seeing the lights outside the garage doors it only took about 30 seconds to him outside and free at last! If the rake fails and you have no flowers of bright colors available try turning off the lights and using a flashlight for the bird to follow. It worked for me. Maybe it’ll work for someone else as well. Good luck!

    Reply
    • Polly ConnerPolly Conner says

      Posted on 2/17/22 at 10:38 am

      Great tip!

      Reply
    • Rachel Tiemeyer says

      Posted on 2/18/22 at 7:41 am

      Sorry you didn’t have luck with this trick, Rich. Thanks for leaving your idea here for others!

      Reply
    • Joe says

      Posted on 3/9/22 at 4:07 pm

      I tried the rake and he just ran from it. The minute I got wih in 5 feet he would fly off to another corner. I opend the door and hung a feeder at about 5 feet in the center of the garage …. we’ll see what happens

      Reply
      • Joe says

        Posted on 3/9/22 at 4:21 pm

        We have luck, he is using the feeder!!! Hopefully he will be able to maintain his strength until he wises up to the gaping 16ft by 7 ft hole in the side of the garage LOL

  2. Tyler says

    Posted on 12/21/21 at 7:18 pm

    Just wanted to take the time to advocate for this page. We had a hummingbird fly into our warehouse at about 9am and was stuck all day up until about 5pm. 🙁 We found a red rake and taped a stick we found to the end of it. (Our warehouse has a 25ft ceiling) Co-worker held the rake up for about 5 seconds until the hummingbird landed on the rake and we slowly walked it to the garage door. 🙂 This was such great advice. We have all white insulated walls and ceiling and bright led shop lights. I’m led to believe the hummingbird was confused thinking up was out because of the tarping insulation. Thank you for this post 🙂 It saved a hummingbird.

    Reply
    • Rachel Tiemeyer says

      Posted on 12/22/21 at 9:52 am

      Thank you for taking the time to leave a comment. I’m thrilled that my dad’s advice worked for you!

      Reply
  3. Anita Paschall says

    Posted on 9/28/21 at 9:31 am

    THANK YOU – poor guy had been trapped overnight – had tried multiple other internet suggestions – then found this – it took me two tries to get him to the open door but worked like a charm – he was exhausted and covered with cobwebs from his soaring around our garage so when I got him to outside I was able to get him to rest in my hand to clean him up and he drank some nectar, rested a bit and flew off – thank you so much!

    This is actually why we leave our garage door down all the time but he must have flown in when my husband came home yesterday. After reading so many stories of how these guys will essentially just collapse from exhaustion rather than come down off the ceiling to fly out – I was thrilled to find this!!!

    Reply
  4. Joe the bird whisperer says

    Posted on 9/27/21 at 10:36 am

    Just saved a hummingbird from my garage. Funny, I had already started using the rake before seeing this article but had given up. After reading this I went back with more determination to continue. Finally, I lowered the garage door and urged him over towards the side door. He got on the rake and when I lowered it a bit he must have seen the sky through the door and flew out!

    Reply
  5. Jeanne Arnold says

    Posted on 9/23/21 at 5:13 pm

    Worked great, we took a couple of pink flowers we had that they like and taped them on the tines of the rake. The bird went right to the flowers when we put the rake up near her. Then she got on the tines and we slowly lowered the rake and just moved it outside and off she flew. She had been in there for over an hour. Thank goodness for google.

    Reply
  6. Mike Doran says

    Posted on 9/20/21 at 2:01 pm

    Thanks for posting this. It worked in under a minute for me also. The bird was exhausted and let me slowly lower the rake and move towards the door. He/she saw the light and was gone. Very relieved.

    Reply
  7. Sherry Butler says

    Posted on 9/17/21 at 8:03 pm

    I’m glad it worked for you. I tried for over an hour & the hummingbird only flew away from the rake. I even put a red rag on it to attract it but it still flew away from it. I also left for a bit & thought it might calm a little but nope. Maybe it was just too flustered.

    Reply
  8. Richie K says

    Posted on 9/14/21 at 10:09 am

    Blessings from Myrtle Beach, SC… it worked in under a minute! Poor little guy was panicking and chirping but landed right on the rake! I proceeded to remove the door release pull cords on both my doors… never thought of that. Thank you for the post!!!!

    Reply
    • Rachel Tiemeyer says

      Posted on 9/15/21 at 11:22 am

      Sweet! So glad it work for you.

      Reply
  9. Dave says

    Posted on 9/12/21 at 1:52 pm

    After a day of trying to get him to find his way out I searched for hummingbird in garage and found this page. Because my garage ceiling is so high I couldn’t use a rake so I hung a hummingbird feeder from the long pole I use to take down Christmas lights and put it near him. He flew down to it, landed, and I lowered him toward the door. When he was done drinking off he went! Five minutes. Thank YOU, and thank those who posted their slightly altered solutions for the tips.

    Reply
    • AGray says

      Posted on 9/23/21 at 10:51 pm

      Happened to us at night. Went to close up garage and discovered one on top of door. Offered up fresh sugar water 2-1 and she flew right to the feeder. After a few minutes we were outside and she was drinking nectar from feede by outside flood light. Outen the light and off she went. High 40’s tonight hope she’s ok. It’s late in the season, but we’ll hang a 2nd feeder for the late migrators tomorrow! Hummingbirds are amazing.

      Reply
  10. T Mortillaro says

    Posted on 9/8/21 at 10:58 am

    Worked right away, thank you!

    Reply
  11. Tim says

    Posted on 9/7/21 at 7:17 pm

    Wow!!! Worked in 5 minutes! Thanks for the tip!

    Reply
    • Tim says

      Posted on 9/7/21 at 7:20 pm

      One modification: it was after dark when I attempted this. It wouldn’t stay on the broom once I tried to lower it. Trick is to get him on that broom, then turn the lights out and carefully walk to the garage door. I guess the darkness calms them.

      Reply
  12. EstebanP says

    Posted on 9/5/21 at 7:03 pm

    Tried this for over a 30 minutes. Never landed on rack

    Reply
  13. Teresa says

    Posted on 9/4/21 at 10:43 am

    I hung a feeder off of a broom handle. I stood very still and waited for the hummingbird to land on it. I than slowly walked towards the garage door opening where he quickly flew off. 😊 (I didn’t have a rake handy, but your idea pointed me in the right direction)

    Reply
  14. Cindy Cadwell says

    Posted on 8/30/21 at 4:35 pm

    HOW TO GET HUMMINGBIRD OUT OF YOUR GARAGE using a rake worked!!! thank you so much!!!

    Reply
    • Rachel Tiemeyer says

      Posted on 8/30/21 at 5:13 pm

      Yay!!! Happy to hear it worked again. 🙂

      Reply
  15. M says

    Posted on 8/21/21 at 6:09 pm

    I used a feeder hung on my light changer and it worked in short time. Thank you.

    Reply
  16. Chantyl says

    Posted on 8/18/21 at 12:59 pm

    Thank you so much I was having such a hard time getting it to understand how to get out 🙂

    Reply
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