He’s still here, and guess what…

2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0066

…He’s not alone! He brought a friend.

Yesterday morning I heard the distinctive call the pileated woodpecker makes when he swoops in for a landing at the backyard buffet. So of course I picked up my camera and headed for my post at the kitchen window (It actually makes a good bird shooting blind, although I do my shooting with a Nikon D7100 instead of a gun). Sure enough there he was at his favorite suet feeder, and for the next 10 minutes, I tracked him from feeder to feeder and even over to our neighbor’s apple tree. I shot lots of pictures! Here’s a sampling:

2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0093
Next to the oriole feeder
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0059
On our neighbor’s apple tree
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0041
Scanning the neighborhood from the top of the hopper feeder
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0021
Still scanning
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0069
Leaning over to grab a bite of suet
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0091
Hanging on the trunk of our tallest tree
2017_04_19_Places_back yard buffet0114
Swinging from the feeder on the old swing set

Now how observant are you? Can you tell which bird is our usual P.W. and which one is the “friend?” Here’s a hint: the friend is a female. Take another look at the pictures. Three are of the female friend. Can you pick them out?

Here’s another hint: the male has a red mustache and a full head of red hair.

Are you an expert on pileated woodpeckers or were you as surprised as I was to discover that our guest is actually two different birds? (The female is sitting next to the oriole feeder, hanging on the trunk of our tallest tree, and swinging from the feeder on the old swing set.) S/he had me fooled! What a surprise.

Hope you enjoyed this visit to our backyard bird buffet.
See you soon. ~Trail Walker

13 Replies to “He’s still here, and guess what…”

  1. I did not know about the visual differences between the male and female, but your pictures beautifully illustrates them. Here’s a quotation for you from Verlyn Klinkenburg about the naturalist Gilbert White: “He recorded what he noticed and in the pattern of noticing lies the art.”

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a reply to Clare Cancel reply