Visitor to my salt lick

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Joined
Nov 30, 2004
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Alabama, in the bend of the Tennessee River
Maybe he likes a little salt on his insects...
Indianhen.jpg

We call these "Indian Hens", not sure what his scientific name is... Pileated Woodpecker, is that right?
 

gunzo

Hunter
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Sep 8, 2010
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Kentucky
Yes, that's a Pileated Woodpecker, a female actually. A male will have a red, rather than black stripe on it's jaw. They are yeararound here but don't see one that often, a real treet when you do.
 

HAWKEYE#28

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Near North Woods,MINN, USA
I "have" a pair............Love them...........Oughta see them demolish a large chunk of hard white suet! Not as often seen here in summer; seems there are enough bugs out there in the trees. Winter is when they show up on the suet feeders. 8)
 
Joined
Jan 20, 2008
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Orange County, CA
Used to see them while grouse hunting in upstate NYS--a BIG bird with a neat paint job! My Marine uncle told me they sound just like a Nambu light machine gun when they are working on a dead tree.
 
Joined
Jan 16, 2009
Messages
1,138
Location
SE Michigan
I was up in a tree stand some years ago and thought I heard a noisy deer come in. Finally spotted the Pileated Woodpecker about 20 yards away working his way around a tree at my elevation. Beautiful very large bird. He would hop around and locate a spot. Then he would haul back his head and land a single blow like a pliedriver. Bark would fly everywhere and trickle down to the forest floor. (Thus my deer footsteps).

Don't know how his brain didn't turn to mush from the impact. What a treat.
 

ShortBBL

Blackhawk
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Nov 20, 2009
Messages
731
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MN
HAWKEYE#28 said:
I "have" a pair............Love them...........Oughta see them demolish a large chunk of hard white suet! Not as often seen here in summer; seems there are enough bugs out there in the trees. Winter is when they show up on the suet feeders. 8)

Funny story Hawkeye! My uncle lives near Carlos Avery in Anoka County and had a pair there too! Almost every time I visit him lately, I saw at least one or the other of them! They also love his suet!!

I was over there a week ago, showing him my iPad and I just happened to show him my "Birding" app.... well, when the Woody showed up, he said "play the redtailed hawk call on it and see if he hears it". Ha ha... he DID have great hearing! I played the recording of the hawk, the Woody looked up and down and around... then made a Bee-line for the woods!!

About 30 minutes later, he was back at the suet.
 

KTM

Single-Sixer
Joined
Apr 7, 2008
Messages
129
Location
Wisconsin
I have quite a few Pileated Woodpeckers around my house. They go through suet like crazy. I have the suet feeder in a maple tree a short distance from my house. They typically fly from across the road up my driveway, swoop around the corner of the house and land in the tree. Once they feel safe they drop down to the feeder. A few years back I was taking a video of one as it landed on the suet feeder but didn't get a good hold. It was cold outside, about -10F. It struggled to get upright but couldn't so it let go and dropped to the ground and landed on it's back. It laid there struggling to get up. I kept taking video of it while I waited for it to get up and fly away but it didn't. I stopped the camera and ran outside grabbing a pair of leather gloves on my way. I carefully picked it up then placed it on the ground upright on it's feet. It took it two tries to fly away and it finally got some altitude and flew into the woods across the road from my property. I hope it survived. Not sure why it was so weak, only thing I can think of is that it used up too much energy struggling to get a proper foothold on the feeder. Another time I was walking in my yard and as I got near the corner of the house one came swooping around the corner at head height! I had to duck to avoid getting hit in the face by it. :shock:
 

ruggedruger

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Oct 24, 2009
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Great bird. I see them while I'm sitting in the stand all the time. Pretty much the bird "Woody the Woodpecker" was based on I guess.
 

ruggedruger

Single-Sixer
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Oct 24, 2009
Messages
462
...and if you ever see one with an ivory-colored bill (you won't), don't say a word, or you'll lose that hunting ground forever... :)
 
Joined
Nov 30, 2004
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Location
Alabama, in the bend of the Tennessee River
Ha, probably right. Still, I'd like to see an ivory-billed woodpecker. Are they totally extinct or just extremely rare?

To answer my own question, this from Wikipedia:

The Ivory-billed Woodpecker (Campephilus principalis) is or was one of the largest woodpeckers in the world, at roughly 20 inches in length and 30 inches in wingspan. It was native to the virgin forests of the southeastern United States (along with a separate subspecies native to Cuba). Due to habitat destruction, and to a lesser extent hunting, its numbers have dwindled to the point where it is uncertain whether any remain. The species is listed as critically endangered and possibly extinct by the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN).[1] The American Birding Association (ABA) lists the Ivory-billed Woodpecker as a Class 6 species, a category the ABA defines as "definitely or probably extinct."[2]

Reports of at least one male Ivory-billed Woodpecker in Arkansas in 2004 were investigated and subsequently published in April 2005 by a team led by the Cornell Lab of Ornithology (Fitzpatrick et al., 2005). No definitive confirmation of those reports emerged, despite intensive searching over five years following the initial sightings.

A $10,000 reward was offered in June 2006 for information leading to the discovery of an Ivory-billed Woodpecker nest, roost or feeding site.[3] In December 2008, the Cornell Lab of Ornithology announced a reward of $50,000 to the person who can lead a project biologist to a living Ivory-billed Woodpecker.

In late September 2006, a team of ornithologists from Auburn University and the University of Windsor published reports of their own sightings of Ivory-billed Woodpeckers along the Choctawhatchee River in northwest Florida, beginning in 2005 (Hill et al., 2006). These reports were accompanied by evidence that the authors themselves considered suggestive for the existence of Ivory-billed Woodpeckers. Searches in this area of Florida through 2009 failed to produce definitive confirmation.

Despite these high-profile reports from Arkansas and Florida and sporadic reports elsewhere in the historic range of the species since the 1940s, there is no conclusive evidence for the continued existence of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker; i.e., there are no unambiguous photographs, videos, specimens or DNA samples from feathers or feces of the Ivory-billed. Land acquisition and habitat restoration efforts have been initiated in certain areas where there is a relatively high probability that the species may have survived to protect any possible surviving individuals.


Interestingly, the same article says that the ivory-billed and pileated are not closely related, despite their similar appearance.
 
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