Pileated Woodpecker on Cap Sante!

I glanced out our kitchen window this morning (12/15/2013) and saw something red moving behind some twigs at the base of the largest fir tree in our yard.  Upon closer examination I discovered that it was a female Pileated woodpecker, the first reliable sighting in the Cap Sante neighborhood of which I am aware!  (I’ve lived and birded in the neighborhood for almost 13 years and am aware of no other reports, despite having several neighbors who are birders.)

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Pileated woodpecker photographed in the Cap Sante Neighborhood!

I managed to sneak out of the house for some photos, but the day was heavily overcast and I was unable to obtain really good photos.  The bird was in the yard at least 30 minutes from the time I saw it, but I couldn’t continually observe the bird during that entire time because it went around to the opposite side of the tree.  Here’s hoping the bird will find a mate in the neighborhood and raise a family this next breeding season!

I spent time in the yard with my camera on 12/14/2013, but the photography was disappointing due to the lack of light.  I have to jump through some technical hoops to get anything at all, and the photos are quite grainy.  But I’m posting some of them anyway.  Perhaps in order of descending photo quality, a male Northern flicker, a Song sparrow and a Dark-eyed junco of the Oregon race.  (For about the sixth winter in a row we’ve had a single Slate-colored race in the yard but I have yet to document it this year.)

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Dark-eyed junco of the Oregon race

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Song sparrow

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Male Northern flicker

We’ve also been receiving several daily visits by an apparent pair of Varied thrushes, fairly reliable winter visitors, especially if it snows.  Thrushes are generally considered to be berry and insect eaters (like their look-alike cousins, the American robins) but the Varied thrushes seem to be quite content eating hulled sunflower seed scattered on the ground… or as we perfer to refer to the seed locally, “habitat enhancer”!

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Male Varied thrush

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Presumably a female Varied thrush

And while I’m on the subject of dietary vagaries, here’s one final photo… of a Bewick’s wren supplementing its diet with a little suet!

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Bewick’s wren on a suet feeder!