Woodpeckers

Woodpeckers: Bang the Drum Loudly

Go outside and listen…what do you hear? We’re betting that you will catch the staccato tapping and rapping of your neighborhood woodpeckers. We call it drumming, woodpeckers call it a love call and a warning. Once spring has sprung and it’s time to build a home, find a partner and raise a family. In woodpecker culture, the loudest and most repetitive drummer often goes unchallenged by rivals and captures the attention of the local fair maidens. Can you hear the “King” of the woodpeckers in your neighborhood?

The Toughest Birds at Your Feeders

Woodpeckers are hard-headed. It comes with the territory.

When excavating, woodpeckers can strike a tree at speeds up to 15 mph. This is enough force to create brain damage in most other birds, and certainly in our human brain. But due to a number of adaptations, woodpeckers thrive on this heavy hitting.

Woodpeckers' skulls are incredibly strong, yet lightweight, due to a reinforcing meshwork of bony support struts. This skull structure moderates the impact of the blows while transmitting the force away from the brain.

With all that pounding, why doesn’t a woodpecker’s bill wear down to a dull nub? It does wear down, however, special cells at the tip of the bill constantly replace the lost material, keeping the bill strong and sharp.

Woodpeckers' tails are as tough as their bills. Woodpeckers’ pointed tail feathers are especially strong and rigid, and their tail bones, lower vertebrae and the tail’s supporting muscles are very large in comparison to other birds.

These modifications allow a woodpecker's tail to serve as a sturdy prop that supports its weight while clinging to trees.This behavior and many other woodpecker adaptations can be witnessed in your yard. Woodpeckers can easily be attracted to feeders filled with suet and no-melt dough, especially varieties containing nuts. Simply offer these foods in a WBU Tail Prop feeder, and you can get an up close and personal look at some of the toughest guys in the neighborhood.