Monday, January 10, 2022

Remembering

 

Design - "Flip-it January"
Designer - Lizzie Kate
Fabric - 28 count Country French Cafe Mocha linen
Fibers - GAST - 2 strands over 2 threads
Started - 8 January 2012
Completed - 11 January 2012

An ode to my Acorn Woodpeckers. I miss them.
This is the first post I wrote about them back on the 25th of April, 2013.

I...do have some exciting bird news.

Tuesday morning while puttering around on the Front Porch, I heard an usual sound.

When I zoomed in with my camera, I saw a couple of Acorn Woodpeckers atop a tall snag!  They chattered and flitted about the forest at a distance...

...but I was soon rewarded as they came closer to the Big Bird Feeder.

Notice how, like all woodpeckers, this one is using its tail for balance.

I counted  between 3 to 5 of them, though most often I saw just 2 or 3.  They were extremely active around the house all day Tuesday.

They have such unusual markings too - and are easy to identify in flight.

Some folks think they appear clownish with their dark beak and dark circles around their eyes.  They have very unusual vocalizations too, and sound nothing like other woodpeckers.  Take a listen to the "Typical Voice" here.  My neighbor thinks they sound like a flock of parrots.

Their behavior is parrot-like too.  They hang out in groups and communally raise their young in one nest.   

While they eat sap, seeds, nectar, and insects, acorns are an important part of their diet.  Once again, acting communally they work together to store acorns in one or more storage trees called granary trees.  These trees may have up to 50,000 holes - each storing one acorn!  They are territorial and will defend up to 15 acres surrounding their granary trees from other groups of Acorn Woodpeckers. 

So they lived in the area from April 2013 through the end of September 2021.

2 comments:

Thank you all. I appreciate that you've read my blog and are taking the time to comment.