Pileated Woodpecker
Outdoor Ontario

Pileated Woodpecker

Shortsighted

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I just love it when a bird advertises its presence in a definitive manner, although perhaps somewhat less ostentatiously as Foghorn Leghorn might proclaim ... I'm here, I'm here, let the bells ring out and the banners fly, but I'm here!  A Pileated woodpecker comes close, if not quite as articulate, because I sometimes confuse them with flicker.  Unfortunately, nine times out of ten they settle high up a tree.


( 420 mm, f5.6 )


Charline

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Envy!!!


Did you see this bird recently? Near where you are?


 8)


Shortsighted

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Yes, an no.  I heard a Pileated woodpecker in the street-side woodlot a couple of times during the last two weeks.  The first time I entered the woodlot looking for it, which turned out to be a big mistake.  The woodlot is too dense a tangle to make any progress and rubber boots are essential.  The second time I did find one, probably the same bird again.  I also saw one at Cranberry Marsh, albeit briefly, and one at the McLoughlin Bay area as a fly-over in Oshawa, as well as in the Guildwood, and the Amos Pond area.  Last month I saw a PW more often.  As I may have previously intimated, I never go out specifically looking for a Pileated woodpecker.  That would be pretentious.  Wait a minute, I am pretentious so maybe I should give it a try.  Please, don't envy me.  I'm old and it sucks.  Late yesterday afternoon I felt like my right hip was dislocating and then I remembered my boot getting stuck in the mud at the bottom of Reesor Pond.  The silt is so soft that even a light-weight like me in over-sized chest wader boots got sucked under.  I had to pull so hard to free my right foot from the muck that it must surely be the cause of the discomfort I felt late yesterday.  It feels better this morning.  Normally I do not have a hip problem.  I have an age problem and I've been told that it's terminal.


Charline

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What do you mean yes and no? This is just one bird, it can split its location in the photo??  ;)


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Yes, I saw it recently.  It may be the same bird that I previously saw, even before this photo.  Perhaps even from last year.  They have a large territory and therefore it may not actually be a new PWP.  The last time that I saw two PWP at the same time was at Duffins Creek.  They were too high for a photo and located into the sun, don't ya know.