How to Get a Hummingbird Out of a Garage
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!)
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.
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.
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.
Congratulations! You just saved a hummingbird’s life!
Connie Schachel says
We’ve had two in the garage in the past week. I tried the rake but because of a pesky tremor in my hands, I couldn’t hold it still enough to make the hummer comfortable. I finally went to Walmart and bought a minnow net for less than $5. I attached it to a pole and in just a few minutes was able to snare the bird in the net and carry it outside. Neither were hurt in any way and both flew away.
Patsy says
Wish I’d read this yesterday! I did get my hummingbird out but only because it got stuck in between the ceiling and the garage door opener cord! Thank you for this wonderful tip!
Rachel Tiemeyer says
You’re welcome. I’m glad your hummer got away on it’s own.
Melinda says
Wow, this method worked like a charm after a hummingbird got trapped in our garage. Literally took less than a minute to free the little guy. I can now call myself an official bird whisperer!! Thank you!!
Rachel Tiemeyer says
Ha, ha! That’s great to hear, Melinda.
Henry says
My wife gave me a beautiful red and green neon advertising sign which I placed in the garage and turned on today with the garage door open. Later, I happened to look out and to my surprise, a female hummer was trapped, trying to escape to no avail. I first tried hanging a feeder with no luck. I grabbed my I Pad and googled for help, seeing your website. I immediately used a garden rake as mentioned by several posts and in less than two minutes, the North Carolina blue sky had a beautiful hummer going up toward a tall pine tree in the backyard. Thanks for tip. It works.
Kathleen says
Thank you! You saves a NC hummingbird today!
Luke says
Wow! Thanks. I had to put the rake on his favorite resting spots to encourage him to land on it. He wasn’t really the bright kind, and he flew the wrong way a few times while taking him out. Luckily I came across this article, you’re a real bird hero!
Bob says
Thank you for this! We had one in our house (bad cat!). The bird was scared and flying against the 9′ ceiling for quite some time and we couldn’t get it to fly low enough to find the windows we had opened. We eventually cut one of the bright flowers from our garden that they like to feed on, and used it as a lure. I stood outside where I was hidden and let it gently sway in the open window. The hummingbird eventually flew over to it, and I slowly pulled the flower away and it flew out. Thx to this site, the rake would have been my next move!
Jake says
This is the best! Had a hummingbird fly into the house yesterday. I let the door open and pulled the blinds hoping that the hummingbird would find the door over night. No luck. I used this “Rake” trick. Took only two minutes. Thank you. We love our hummingbirds.
Rachel Tiemeyer says
Great to hear this!
Maureen says
This happened to me today. I had the garage door open as I was working. I was beside myself because she was so stressed and kept flying up instead of out. She did rest on the garage track occasionally. I tried hanging her feeder from it — to no avail. Then she flew up and as I tried getting her to land on the broom stick, then she flew down to the floor. As I tried picking her up, she flew up and right out of the garage. I was so thrilled. I hope she’s going to be ok. I’ve been waiting for her to come to the feeder. Haven’t seen her yet.
Connie says
Take method not working. My garage is about 15 ft high. I have a feeder inside and one at the raised door. No luck as of this time about 24 hrs now. He is drinking from the feeder in the garage so is keeping his energy up. Just hoping he will eventually go to feeder at the door as the sun gets higher in the sky.
Margaret says
This trick worked for us immediately. It may have helped the the rake was red. She flew for a bit before landing. I carried her out and she was gone. Such a relief. Thanks!
Shannon says
It worked!!! We used a broom! Thank you!
Rachel Tiemeyer says
Good to hear that, Shannon. Thanks!
Hummingbird lober says
We tried your method,.it didn’t work for us. We used 2 big umbrellas and kept them on top of their head and reduced it down guided them out of garage door.
Kate says
We just had a small female in our very large shop (almost 2 stories high) and the darn bird just would not land on the rake, or a red platform on a stick my husband built. We got pretty tired of holding it up while on the top of the big ladder. In the end we suspended a feeder from the ceiling for a while, we she recharged on several times. And then we hung the feeder from the open garage door with a whole lot of red tuck tape. Once she got to that stage, she was able to fly out the door. Thanks for giving us a place to start from!
Mimi says
Found your advice just in time! We had opened all the windows and doors, put the feeder w red fake flowers half in and half out the door, turned off all the inside lights, took a very long handled duster and tried putting it behind the hummingbird hoping it would encourage her to deviate her flying pattern, all to no avail. We were giving up hope when I told my husband I’d check the internet for an idea we hadn’t tried. Couldn’t find our rake but quickly found a long handled fruit picker w a bright yellow “picker”. In two minutes that hummer perched on the yellow tines and was so tired it didn’t even flinch when my husband slowly moved her outside. Even then she sat on those tines for a number of seconds but finally flew off. Think we would have found a dead hummer on the floor in just a short time but instead that little hummer is going home w a big story to tell.
Rachel Tiemeyer says
Way to improvise!
Brad Beausoleil says
I tried it just now, worked like a champ. This one is burned in my head forever….
Rachel says
Woo hoo! Love it.