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First Nature 3055 32-Ounce Hummingbird Feeder (Set of 2), Red (993055-44A)

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Availability: Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
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Arrives Thursday, Sep 11
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Features

  • Wide-mouth reservoir and patented two-part base is easy to fill and clean
  • Innovative sealing ring aids in leak prevention
  • Red base attracts inquisitive hummingbirds
  • Made in use

Brand: FIRST NATURE


Target Species: Hummingbird


Recommended Uses For Product: Nectar


Material: Plastic


Special Feature: Easy-Refill Top, Leakproof


Brand: ‎FIRST NATURE


Target Species: ‎Hummingbird


Recommended Uses For Product: ‎Nectar


Material: ‎Plastic


Special Feature: ‎Easy-Refill Top, Leakproof


Mounting Type: ‎Hanging Mount


Product Dimensions: ‎11"L x 10"W x 7"H


Included Components: ‎bird feeder


Capacity: ‎2 Pounds


Theme: ‎Hummingbird Feeding


Color: ‎Red


Item Weight: ‎11.2 ounces


UPC: ‎742574110227


Manufacturer: ‎First Nature


Item Package Dimensions L x W x H: ‎11.61 x 8.74 x 6.97 inches


Package Weight: ‎0.4 Kilograms


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎11 x 10 x 7 inches


Brand Name: ‎FIRST NATURE


Warranty Description: ‎30 day limited


Model Name: ‎993055-44A


Suggested Users: ‎unisex-adult


Part Number: ‎FBA_3055


Size: ‎2 Pack


Date First Available: April 21, 2016


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Thursday, Sep 11

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great quality product
I like how easy they are to clean and they do not leak. Sturdy. No complaints.
Reviewed in the United States on August 21, 2025 by Nicole

  • Hummingbird Feeder (Set of 2), 32 oz each Red by First Nature (993055-44A)
Great buy on a 2 pack of First Nature Hummingbird Feeds large 32 oz each. High quality and easy to clean, comes with their own heavy duty black snap on or off clip. These are my favorite go to 32 oz hummingbird feeders. Hummingbirds especially love the dark red color versus other lighter shades of orange red. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 24, 2025 by Sherri Laird

  • Excellent and Versatile Feeders
I now have 6 of these feeders! Why do I like them so much? First, the hummers like them. Second, no yellow anything on them (yellow seems to attract bees, which we don’t need). Third, so easy to clean and fill. Fourth, very stable if you want to set them on a surface instead of hanging. Fifth, very easy to hang. No issues with leakage. On the rare occasion a bug gets into one of the ports, easy to clean them out. I also like that these are 32 ozs. I only keep one or two in rotation during the winter months, which suits our Anna’s fine, and only do a partial fill during those months. I add two more in early March. When the Rufous return in mid-to-late March (we’re in western Washington state), consumption takes a serious uptick. They’ll start draining these quickly. I keep one feeder in reserve, so can put a full one out when I bring an empty one in, so I have no impatient “customers”. In the winter cold months, I either bring them in at night, or set on Christmas or rope lights to keep the nectar warm enough so it doesn’t freeze. Works great and doesn’t compromise the integrity of the feeder base at all. Cold nectar can actually impact their little bodies in a negative way, as we found out during extreme cold weather this past February - they can go into torpor and fall off a feeder, so do keep the nectar in the mid-30s or above, if you can. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 26, 2019 by Karla Karoma

  • Best feeder out there
Best feeder I have been able to find. Large capacity bottle holds about 3 cups of sugar water. Large mouth bottle for easy cleaning and filling. 2 piece makes cleaning much easier.
Reviewed in the United States on May 21, 2025 by Karl Webster

  • Uh-oh - bee problems
Notes on my (so far) success and failures at the end, but the biggest thing I want to stress is DO NOT KILL THE HONEYBEES. They are vital to life no matter how annoying they can be for hummingbird lovers. While it might be tempting to off them when you can't exit your home (lol), squelch the temptation and keep trying. It's taken me about 24 hours to at this point to deter them, and if the solution that worked for me stops working, I will update you and keep trying. It's foolish, short-sighted, and selfish to kill the very important honeybees just so we can enjoy looking at hummingbirds. So off the bee soapbox and onto my griping about them!! ;) I got two of these last season because they didn't have yellow on them, which supposedly attracts bees (so why are bee guards yellow?? That seems cruel! haha), and were promoted as easy to clean. I had absolutely no problems with bees last year, but I think I got these too late in the season. I think the bees already had their feeding spots picked out. They are SWARMING this year. I tried making my own bee guards, but they only worked on some of the holes, so the bees covered the two holes they could still get in. The one they loved was by my back door, so it was a problem going in and out without bees flying in. I moved it to another location, and they just swarmed the empty area where the feeder originally hung (of course also the hummingbirds' favorite location!) I hung a feeder with bee guards there. They swarmed that when I first put it in the same location, but it seems they gave up once they realized they can't get into it. (They were clustered around the base of some of the flowers; I'm guessing some of the sugar water dribbled out there, and they left when it was all gone.) I saw a review talking about how to make the hole smaller when I came to write this review, so I'll give that a try tonight after the bees leave since my homemade bee guards were of limited usefulness. I do wish First Nature would make bee guards for these feeders because everything else about them is just about perfect. They aren't beautiful, but they are by far my favorite feeders (I have about a dozen.) SUCCESSES: 1. Success (so far). Completely eliminate the accessible source at their favorite location, and replace it with one with bee guards. FAILURES: 1. Fail. I read that the bees would go to a stronger sugar source and to put out a yellow bowl of that to attract them. I did that with a 1 sugar:2 water ratio. (I reread the thing this morning, and I had the ratio backwards. Not sure if that would have worked since they went to the 1:4 over the 1:2, but maybe worth a retry in desperation.) I even put it right next to their favorite feeder and left it there when I removed it. They weren't interested. (If you do try this, put pebbles in, and keep the liquid level just slightly above the pebbles so the bees don't drown.) 2. Fail. All red feeder. They ignored the ones with yellow and swarmed the red one. They liked that location for some reason. 3. Fail. Putting it in the shade. It has more constant shade than any of the other feeders. They didn't care. 4. Fail. Flowers. My next-door-neighbor and I have a ton of flowers. Didn't seem to matter. The neighbor's flowers are as close to the favorite feeder as some of my other feeders, but they didn't seem to care. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 14, 2019 by I review

  • Lots of hummingbirds at my feeders!
These work great to feed those precious little hummingbirds. Please don’t use red dye though! Boil 3-4 cups water, add 1 cup sugar, stir well & let cool. They love it. Also, it’s important to clean thoroughly & put fresh sugar water or it can get moldy & harm your little friends.
Reviewed in the United States on June 16, 2025 by Desertpolarbear

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