

WBU Educational Resources
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The Great
Backyard
Bird Count
Major sponsorship provided by
Wild Birds Unlimited. |
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Click
here for more topics about
backyard birdfeeding and the
wild birds visiting your yard!
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Wondrous Woodpeckers
Woodpeckers may be the most aptly named bird around. Given their
druthers, they will peck at wood for food – primarily the insects and
beetle larvae they find yummy.
So how do their bodies handle all that pounding? They are well
equipped! They have two toes that point backward and allow them to cling
to tree trunks. They have special stiff tail feathers that support their
bodies. Air bubbles in their skulls act as shock absorbers every time
they slam a tree trunk with their beak. And their super-sticky tongues
reach into the holes they create to dig out the delectable insects. Of
all the woodpeckers that call North America home, only a few regularly
visit feeders. Red-bellied, Hairy and Downy woodpeckers are frequent
feeder visitors, and all savor suet. |
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Download Our
Brochure
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Stop Woodpeckers From
Pounding On Your House

List of Educational
Brochures
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Frequently Asked
Questions |
| Q: What can I do to keep the woodpeckers off my house?
Generally, woodpeckers
peck at houses for one of three reasons – to attract a mate or proclaim
territory, to seek food (insects in the wood), or to try to create a nest in
the side of a building.
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The Red-bellied Woodpecker really doesn’t have a red belly – just
a pale rosy tint. This woodpecker is unusual in that it will sample about
any food it finds. It eats seeds, fruit and insects and loves acorns when
they are available. These woodpeckers use their tongues more than their
beaks to find their food.
Downy and Hairy woodpeckers have almost identical markings,
although the Hairy Woodpecker is bigger than the Downy Woodpecker by about 2
inches. Hairy Woodpeckers can find their food by feeling the vibrations made
by insects moving about in trees or hearing the insects chewing on the wood!
They also eat fruit, pinecone seeds and sometimes feed at wells made in
trees by sapsuckers or at hummingbird feeders. Downy Woodpeckers like to
devour a fly larvae that spends the winter in the woody galls atop goldenrod
stems.
All
woodpeckers pale in comparison to the incredible
Pileated Woodpecker.
This enormous bird feeds on insects found primarily in large trees or dead
or fallen trees. It makes a characteristic fist-sized hole that’s
rectangular in shape with curved edges. And as soon as it is done, other
woodpeckers come in to finish the leftovers.
Scaring Woodpeckers
- Scaring woodpeckers may be successful if
started promptly. Scaring the woodpeckers from the house or area relies
upon the bird's response to danger or unpleasant experiences.
- Spray the woodpecker with water from a
garden or high-pressure water hose.
- Light pie plates and metal can lids can be
suspended on a string. One end of the string can be near a convenient
window or door where the line can be jerked whenever the bird appears.
- Attach string to the ends of aluminum foil
strips cut two to three inches in width and two to three feet in length
and hang from damaged or tapping sites.
- Pinwheels with reflective vanes may be
attached at tapping or damaged sites. These must rotate in order to be a
deterrent.
- Models or silhouettes of snakes, owls or
hawks may be the least effective unless they are hung to move in the
breeze and/or in conjunction with playing recorded calls of birds of prey.
Excluding Woodpeckers
- Cover the site with plastic or nylon
netting or hardware cloth. Permanent installation of hardware cloth or
other screening may be the best solution when woodpeckers make repeated
attempts over several years to make holes or nests.
- Metallic or wooded surfaces used for
drumming may be wrapped or covered with cloth or foam. An alternative
tapping site or surface such as a wooden box or metal cylinder hung in a
less annoying location may be considered.
- Placing a woodpecker house over the area
if the bird is interested in nesting may encourage the bird to stop
creating another hole.
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