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Pileated Woodpecker


Sat afternoon, hanging out on the trees just the other side of the fence.

This is only the 3rd time I've spotted this bird, let alone got clear enough photos to positively identify them, here at Five Oaks.

Next to the Red Headed Woodpecker and the Yellow Bellied Sapsucker, these are the hardest Woodpeckers to get photos of here. I swear they know when you're trying to get a photo of them. Heh.



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Re: Wow!

Date: 2023-01-24 07:20 pm (UTC)
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
From: [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
>>This one either lives among the large Oaks by the ponds, or the heavily wooded area across the road.<<

Yeah, that's the kind of habitat they like.

>> Before our snag fell (old Red oak that died before we bought the house, birds loved it, so we left it, until the base rotted out and it fell into the hay field), that's where I'd spot them.<<

They need standing snags, and because of their size, pileated woodpeckers need bigger ones than other species do.

We had a big standing snag for about 10 years before it fell to become a log. Currently I have a maple that's dying, and the woodpeckers love it.

If you like birdscaping, you can add a snag to your yard:

Attract Birds by Adding a Snag to Your Yard

Attracting Birds With Snags - Wood Birdhouses

Attracting Wildlife With Dead Trees - Ipswich, MA

Bird Community Response to Timber Stand Improvement and Snag Retention

Brush piles: improving backyard habitat

Creating starter holes for cavity-nesting birds - NestWatch

Creating a Stumpery - Penn State Extension

Dead trees can support a lot of life - Audubon California

Did You Know? Dead Trees or Snags Support a Plethora of Wildlife!

Do NOT cut down that dead or dying tree - Ferns & Feathers

The Ecosystem Benefits of Dead Standing Wood, or “Tree Snags”

Girdle invasive species to create valuable snags

A Guide to Building and Placing Birdhouses: Save a Snag for Wildlife

How to Make a DIY Stumpery in Your Garden - Dengarden

The importance of snags and downed logs to wildlife – OFNC

It's for the birds: creating snags for bird habitat

Life in a Snaggy Wood - Tales from a West Michigan Wood

Making a Backyard Bird Sanctuary - Toms River, NJ Patch
A dead tree can be an important element in a bird-friendly environment right outside your window.

My Healthy Woods A Handbook for Family Woodland Owners Managing Woods in New Jersey

Plant a standing snag for wildlife

Providing Snags in the Home Habitat - American Artifacts

Snag (ecology) - Wikipedia

Snag Management - Idaho Department of Lands

Snag Some Birds with Snags - Black Hills Audubon Society

Snag Trees and Healthy Ecosystems - Conservation Northwest

Snag You're It! A Native Plant Journey

SNAGGED: DEAD WOOD FOR WILDLIFE - New Jersey Audubon

Snags, Bark Beetles, and Cavity-Nesting Birds: Conservation and Management in Ponderosa Pine Forests of the Pacific Northwest

Snags, Cavity Trees and Downed Logs

Snags for Wildlife Fact Sheet

Snags: The Wildlife Tree - WDFW

snags, or wildlife trees: cultivate, don’t cart away, dead, dying, and hazard trees

Stumpery - Wikipedia

The Stumpery Garden: A Perfect Place for Ferns and Woodland Gems

The Victorian Stumpery

What tree makes a good snag in the urban landscape?

Re: Wow!

Date: 2023-01-25 09:00 pm (UTC)
ysabetwordsmith: Cartoon of me in Wordsmith persona (Default)
From: [personal profile] ysabetwordsmith
>>This was the Habitat Oak, as we called it for the birds and the Five Line Skinks that lived on/in it,<<

Skinks are so adorable. :D

>>It still looks odd back there now.<<

Every time a big tree falls here, it takes a while to get used to the changed canopy. And I have all the layers of a rainforest: emergent trees (sycamore), canopy trees (mostly walnuts and hackberries), understory trees (mostly mulberries), shrubs (privet, Canadian hemlock, forsythia, etc.), vine (wild grapes!), herbaceous (woodland and prairie plants), ground covers (wild strawberry, lawn, etc.), and roots (sunchoke).

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