Learn All About the Northern Flicker | Overview
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- Опубликовано: 13 июн 2024
- In this video learn about the identification differences between the Yellow-shafted and Red-shafted Northern Flickers, what they eat, where you can find them, things you can do if they are damaging your home, and even ways you can help them in the fight against habitat loss.
Photos and video provided by the following:
(A-Z)
Alex Muench
Twitter / sharkbreadshark
Website alexmuen.ch/
Ebird ebird.org/profile/MTc4NzYzOQ/...
Andrew Hasz
Instagram / lakeskywatcher
Ashley Hale
RUclips / @backyardbeautynh
Facebook / backyard.beauty.nh
Instagram backyard.be...
Bassangler73
Flickr:www.flickr.com/photos/1436998...
Bob Carlyle
Website bobcarlylephotography.ca/
Instagram / bob.carlyle
Eleanor McDonie
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James McKittrick
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/1928594...
JJD Photography
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Website www.jjdphotography.store/
Jason Moris
Instagram / morrisjasond
Joe McKenna
Flickr www.flickr.com/photos/7206322...
Larry Blew
Website www.lblewphotography.com/
Marilyn Vardy
Instagram: mjvardy
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/1473607...
Mark Boatright
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Marlene Trott
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Matthew Siefert
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Oregon Birdhouse
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OvenBirder98
RUclips / @ovenbirder
Website miottawa.org/Parks/birding.htm
RUclips • Virtual Woodpecker Walk
Pacificnorthwestkate
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Raina Angelier
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Craig Cooper
Gayle Highpine
Harris Stein
Kevin Ward
Maxime Touchette
Michele Rosenbaum
Mike McKeag
Paul Bigelow
Sara Hart
West Coast AN
Timestamps / Questions people may have:
00:00 Where to find a Northern Flicker
00:17 What does a Northern Flicker look like
00:40 What are the differences between Yellow and Red-shafted Northern Flickers
00:53 What do Northern Flickers look like continued
01:13 Continued: differences between Yellow and Red-shafted Northern Flickers
01:58 What birds look like a Northern Flicker
02:05 Where are Northern Flickers located and how to find one
03:14 What do Northern FLickers like to eat
03:59 How to attract a Northern Flicker
04:15 Northern Flicker calls and sounds explained
06:36 Northern Flicker mating and other nesting information
08:37 Northern Flicker population
09:03 How long does a Northern Flicker live
09:17 Problems that Northern Flickers face and conservation efforts
09:38 How to help Northern Flickers
10:05 What does it mean when you see a Northern Flicker
10:33 How to stop a Northern Flicker woodpecker from damaging a house
11:25 Lesleys closing thoughts on the Northern Flicker
Thumbnail:
Northern Flicker flying by AGAMI stock
Northern Flicker coming out of nest hole by William Krumpleman
Both are via canva.com pro subscription and have their backgrounds removed and replaced with the orange one as well "Northern Flicker" text was added
Canva.com/pro license www.canva.com/policies/free-m...
Audio:
Music: Castleshire - Chris Haugen via RUclips Audio Library
Northern Flicker call at intro by Aidan Place, XC542145. Accessible at www.xeno-canto.org
Northern Flicker alls at 6:00 - 6:20 Thomas Ryder Payne, XC636252. Accessible at www.xeno-canto.org
Links mentioned:
American Bird Conservancy
abcbirds.org
Pileated Woodpecker video
• The PILEATED WOODPECKE...
Why do woodpeckers like to hammer on houses and what can I do about it?
www.allaboutbirds.org/news/wh...
Northern Flicker Nest Box
Plan and Information
nestwatch.org/learn/all-about...
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If you have a sick or injured bird in your possession I can not help this bird in any way it is strongly advised to contact a local vet or wildlife official before any decisions are made. It is easy to do more harm than good when handling wildlife.
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For business inquiries or Post Office Box information
please contact Jamie at lesleythebirdnerd@gmail.com
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#LesleytheBirdNerd #NorthernFlicker #birds #birdwatching #birdphotography - Животные
🔴Pileated Woodpecker Overview video▶ruclips.net/video/LcRojiK7pqw/видео.html
Excellent commentary on the Northern Flicker differences...well done now I have to venture over to my Pileated cousins 😃
Pest control salesman came by my door today saying he sprayed for ants at neighboring houses. I said I have Northern Flickers that eat my ants. Tried to educate him. Asked him to leave, I do not want your poison. My favourite bird when they started appearing 2 years ago.
Aww James thank you so much for trying to inform people. All we need to do is work with nature. It can all be a perfect balance
Yes anything that eats insects is welcomed in my yard too! Thank you for not poisoning the environment.
We have ants too… (oh well…. ) We refuse to poison them too. We also have mice that we have been trying to solve the mystery of how they get in the house …even tho we would rather not live with them we will NEVER POISON THEM. I trap and release and I’m sure the predators prefer their prey without poison in their system.
I have a female red shafted northern flicker that nests in my Pennsylvania yard. It's the perfect place for her because i have a leaf litter and twig pile from downed branches I pile up. She loves to rifle thru that, but I also grow like 10 different types of berries and the one corner of my yard has ant problem. My yard literally has everything a northern flicker like to eat. The red breasted robins get the worms from the garden beds though lol. They literally line up in spring waiting for me to water the beds or disturb the soil then they swoop in and feast. They peck thru the straw mulch and gorge on earthworms and invasive jumping worms
@@Sunshine-lg8su
Work on attracting owls with a birdhouse for them.
I saved a Red Shafted Flicker last Winter as he was hit by a car and stood by the side of the road wounded. I picked him up and proceeded to take him to the Veterinary . The x-ray showed that him left wing and his shoulder were injured along with his neck. My husband and I kept him in our house for five months. He showed healing after two months and we kept him longer as the Winter would not have been the time to release him. He recovered beautifully and we let him go this Spring. We believe we have seen him a handful of times, calling him by name, Fred. We are so pleased we could help him recoperate and continue his life! We loved him but he managed to keep a distance from us which was healthy for his next stage of life. Thank you for your wonderful video. From one Bird lover to another❤️
Wow, remarkable story and courageous on your part to take in a wild animal (of any kind)
Flickers also squash ants and preen their feathers with them. The formic acid found in ants act as a mite deterrent. A perfect system .
Niiiice..😎
i did not know that, interesting.
They'll grasp them up, alive, and place them into their feathers; pissed off and squirtin'.
@@nicksweeney5176 all bird's have feather lice. perhaps the ants are eating the lice then eaten by the bird?? I've seen them do this as well. Black ants inside rotting trees ??
@@davidmasland5627
Well, hmmmm...🤔💭💭💭 This might could be, this might just could be.
There's also the angle of infuriated, resentful Ants being aggravated to point of hot murder, then being set loose all over the Bird, to hose everything down with Formic Acid, which kills small parasites quite handily.🤷🏻♂️
They like to dig out the ants from between the bricks in my patio. They end up pulling and preventing weeds, too! I love them. ❤️ That’s why I don’t spray for weeds anymore. I’m afraid I’ll hurt them!
Correction:
Around 1:09 I say 30 inches in error I meant to say 30 centimeters (roughly 13 inches).
Thanks for such a great video well done. I have never seen red shafted flicker but have plenty of the yellow shafted in my area I put up a box for woodpeckers This year but no tackers maby next year.🕊️
Too late! I already reinforced my bird feeder with metal trusses.
30 Canadian inches = 13 Imperial inches. ;^)
Loved the video, lived in Michigan growing up and seen many of these amazing birds
*that would make for a really, really big flicker that's a given*
*also we love our resident woodpeckers around here...so much fun to see and hear them messing about in the gutters*
I have become quite connected to northern flickers this spring, as a number of pairs tried to nest in the walls of a nearby grocery store. The manager got a pest control company in and I was horrified, and I notified environment Canada to see what could be done - in the end an in-depth report was prepared and followed through with both Store and the pest control company, so I feel happy that I was able to possibly save some of the birds.
Thank you for this great video Lesley; I always enjoy your videos!
Aww you're so sweet. I feel you so much because I'd be feeling the exact same way as you. Thanks for helping
@@LesleytheBirdNerd Thank you for your response and your caring!
If you enjoyed the video -
Liking, Leaving a comment, or sharing it on Facebook, Twitter, etc. helps out in a big way. From myself and my bird buddies, thank you ALL for watching. It's greatly appreciated!
Thank you for the video
Thank you! Loved it! Will share. I've enjoyed both Flickers on both coasts, and they are magical! Yes hard to catch, but so worth it, when you do! Having a backyard feeder with sunflower seeds helps! I scatter some on the ground too. Dang chipmunks get most of them, but I got the Morning Doves & Bleeding Hearts coming back now!
Another amazing and very interesting video Lesley 😊
Love your videos as always. Keep up the good work!
@@giffordkrivak859 thank you so much
The yellow shafted flickers are quite common on my property in Michigan. The metal rain cap on my chimney is one of their favorite drumming locations. It sounds like a machine gun and always startles me at first. But I am happy to have them here.
Does it hurt it? I have one at my house right now and every day at day break for the last 3 days it drums on my gutter on the corner of my house right outside my room lol. I scared him off a few times, but I also don’t want to scare them off for good bc they eat allot of insects
I suffered a heart break a few years back and, in a way, this started my feeding local birds as a distraction. I had had some experience with a pet bird (a red bellied poicephalus who died way too young from an incurable disease) so I was already very sympathetic to birds and their plights in modern human environments. The first thing was to let a tree that died in our small back yard still stand. It became a great place for the hummingbirds to survey their domain, and I saw a lot of littler birds foraging in the bare branches. As my interest in our sadly neglected yard grew, I put out a couple of bird baths, and eventually bought hummingbird feeders. Then a couple of seed feeders... The birds were quite appreciative and I was thrilled to see them feeding, bathing, drinking, arguing, bringing their fledglings to our cat-less yard... This winter I put out two humming bird feeders on our second floor porch (almost wrote "perch"!), zip tied some pretty, dead branches to the railing for elevated places to invite the birds in, and then added a seed feeder and two suet cages.
OMG. SO MANY BIRDS THIS WINTER! Including, but not limited to pileated and downy woodpeckers which I had never seen before. Then, we had Northern flickers! BIG groups of them! They first came to pillage the ants that had taken up residence in the yard- about six or seven of them came over a few days and basically ate all of them. :D Then these three types of birds found the suet feeders and wow, they LOVED that stuff! So fabulous to see them up close through our windows...
The snow is gone now so they've scattered to find their usual food but they still stop by for a suet top up.
Thank you so much for this video, and all your videos. I've learned so much from you and felt so encouraged to make our garden more and more bird friendly. I hope you have a wonderful new year!
Sad to hear of their decline. I need to cut down a tree, but I think I will just trim it way back instead. Thank you for this information!
I saw one of these for the first time in 2019 after the California fires and it inspired me to learn of birds, 2+ years lator I can name every bird call I hear and I keep a chickens
I LOVE FLICKERS! I've been feeding them for years and years in my backyard in southeastern Michigan. They are such beautiful birds with a lovely call!!
Thanks I did not know that there were Two kinds…. Yellow & red !! Pretty awesome
We have them in our backyard in Southern Alberta pretty much year round. The fledglings are very entertaining, landing in our birdbaths and standing around with their mouths open and waiting for mom or dad to feed them.
Haha. The youngsters are comical. Always loved them
The Red Shafted Flicker has a distinctive undulating flight which shows off the beautiful red in their wings and tail.
I have sandy soil in my yard with lots of ants, so flickers are a common visitor for me.
The "collar" under their chin helps me identify them from red bellies The collar reminds me of the late Ruth Bader Ginsberg, so the wife and I nicknamed these "Gins-Birds".
First time I have heard of a Northern Flicker. Beautiful bird.
Flickys are so cute!
Yeah!
They are helpful friends
Never seen the northern flicker, but what a beautiful bird. I have plenty of downed trees, I used as border to garden area, so maybe one day they will come. Since I live in forest area there are plenty of downed trees for them to choose from though. I hear that call, but could be the pileated who visits my yard every so often.
Sad to hear that their numbers are declining!!! I see very few here in the mid south states..Very nice video!!!
I'm always thrilled to see the first northern flickers every year--they're a sign of spring in southern Michigan! Such beautiful birds to look at with all those spots, mustaches and all.
They really are gorgeous!
The first Northern Flicker I was blessed to see was jack-hammering through the snow on our place in southern Colorado. It was amazing to see how vigorously it worked! I fell in love immediately. What a great species that we are so blessed to have with us. Loved your message at the end about protecting and providing habitat for them. They deserve it!
Aww that must have been so cool to watch. Love those birds. Thanks for your kind comment. Have a great evening
Thank you to all the people who protect their natural environment and thanks for this video. I've noticed they "chuck" when they see me, skidish birds and very smart.
Lesley, you're the best! I'm living in the Maine woods right now and was curious about this guy who's been showing up under the pines to pick up the seeds I throw out. Thanks to all who contributed!
Saw my first flicker while walking on the track at a local university - couldn’t identify it, so this video was terrifically helpful!
Beautifully done video here Lesley. I adore 🥰 the Northern Flicker woodpecker. They are such delightfully fun birds to observe and assist however we can. Love the tips to help the Flicker survive in our own habitats. 🙏 Thank YOU Lesley! Great job!
Agree! Your videos and commentary are truly enjoyable. You give depth to my rudimentary knowledge of birds. So glad I found your channel! I'm a fan of the Eastern Bluebird and have seven of them on my feeder as I type. Taking the time to stop and observe the birds has added a level of calm and insight to my life. I love sharing my world with them.
I saw one last week below my feeder and did not know what it was. So now I know. THANKS GUYS
I love these birds!! I had a nest last year that was used by a nuthatch this year. I always wondered why they hopped on the ground and not going up a tree. Thanks for this wonderful video Lesley.
Too cool about the nuthatch and I'm glad you found the information helpful 🐦🙂
Nuthatches are like baby woodpeckers 😂
I get one to stop by my suet feeder every once in a while. It’s a real treat!
One of my favorite birds. I’ve learned so much from you, thank you.
You're welcome. Thank you for the nice comment 🐦
Lived in Colorado years back near an open space and once in a while I wake up to these jokers pounding on the metal chimney announcing its territory and having its rolling ‘laugh’ afterwards. Always brought a smile to my face….till it knocked down the bird feeder scattering seeds everywhere in my garden…oh well…my fault putting it up there.
Love your videos and Thank You for sharing😊
I'm really loving these collaboration videos. There are so many talented birders out there. (Not that your work isn't superb)! Interesting about the deep cavities that they nest in.
Thank you Heather. I'm really enjoying doing these and am so glad that you like them too.
why do northern flickers mate new partners 🤔
@@LesleytheBirdNerd a long time ago Carolina Wren build nest on windowsel best experience ever☺️
I saw my first one in someone's front yard on a walk. Knowing little about them it was funny to learn spotting them on the ground is more common.
They know where the grub is haha
Living in Arizona I have also seen red-shafted flickers nesting in saguaro cacti!
What a sight!
Thank you so much for including some of my clips in your video Lesley - great video and great work to all the other collaborators!! 🥰🙏❤️✨
Hey you're quite welcome. Thank you for allowing to use your clips they were great. 🐦👍🤗
I've heard these calls. Now I know who made them. Thanks!
Truly one of my favorite woodpeckers. When I first started watching birds, the first winter when a flicker showed up to my suet feeder, I was enthralled. What a beautiful bird. And I was tickled every day he came back. Which he did most days. Now that it is summer, I hear him more than see him. Occasionally, I will catch him on the ground puttering about for food. I still get excited seeing him. What a unique bird.
I hear ya Amy, still after all these years and even though I know more in likely they'll scare off, I get excited when I see or hear one. Just love them.
There is also a Guatemalan variation of the Northern Flicker - which has a beautiful plumage of dirty wine head and scarlet mustache for the male and rustic head and mustache for the female.
Flickers have fascinated me since I was a child growing up in Florida.
Thank you to all the people who helped provide footage of the Flickers! Awesome video and a awesome bird!
The red ones like the telephone pole outside my house. They “Say hi” to me before moving on to their next migration destination.
You are amazing. I learn so much from your calm and knowledgeable voice. ☘️💐🌱🌾🌻
Aww Robert that's wonderful. Thank you 🐦☺️
I get a group of about 4 that come into my yard, occasionally, and peck at the ground. pretty cool birds. Everett, WA.
About fifty years ago I was lucky enough to rescue, raise, and release a nest of these amazing birds after a storm blew over their tree. Been a favorite ever since. Excellent video.
How sweet! I’m glad that they were able to be released back in the wild in the end. Kudos! 👍
Oh my gosh how wonderful. That had to be quite the experience. Thanks for helping them
So that's the bird who rat-a-tats on the metal cap of our furnace chimney in the early morning! 😲 Just saw one on our railing a few days ago. It's bird song was beautiful so I had to go and see what kind of bird it was. 😍Thank you, Lesley
Thanks for the details of the nest. You got me scheming. Had some feeding in our yard a few years back. Can you make a video about the Great Crested Flycatcher? A lovely bird living in our yard the past few years.
Gorgeous bird, such a treat whenever I spot one. I think I saw one flying last week, it had that distinctive white rump when it flew! that was all i could tell from it, as I wasn't wearing my glasses... I thought it was a mourning dove at first because of the brown. Very possible it was a flicker though!! Great video, Lesley
Mourning Dove would not have had a white rump. Only white on that part of a Mourning Dove is a fringe along the outer tail feathers. I'd say you saw a Flicker!
I had a couple nesting for a few years in my apple tree trunk. Northern Michigan
That distinctive call should make them easier to locate in the wild. They're a sight to behold, for sure..
I had one in the maple tree today. He was making his call and all of a sudden there were 3. Very unique and 1st time seeing one, a real treat!
All birds are beautiful!
Seems like the more beautiful - the closer to extinction.
@Nick Sweeney So specifically non-specific.
@@paulsawczyc5019 Not necessarily. Except for parrots and macaws, which are affected by the pet trade and habitat loss, and species like the Painted Bunting (I think their conservation status is also threatened by habitat loss), I don’t think there is a strong correlation between the aesthetic beauty of a bird and threatened conservation status.
@@BirdsandGhibliFan It just seems that way because there are so many plain jane looking birds, compared to showy birds - at least where I live in New Jersey.
@@paulsawczyc5019 I kinda see what you mean. I also live in NJ, and sometimes it seems like there is little variety of colorful birds outside of the common Cardinals, Blue Jays, and the state bird, the American Goldfinch in the summer. However, the good news is, I attracted an Eastern Kingbird to my backyard feeders for the first time a couple of days ago. As for woodpeckers, it seems I can only attract the Downy Woodpeckers (and Red-Bellied Woodpeckers on rare occasions). I hope to attract Pileated Woodpeckers and Flickers, but I don’t think I live in the right habitat for them. Hopefully, that changes when I move out-of-state one day. Take care, and happy birding! 👋🐦🙂
I love to hear them from afar! Thank you Lesley, now I know their song and other infos! Ah I hate starlings!
They've been frequenting our place lately (winter). My favorite thing is just how often they'll just sit and watch. Pretty chill, too -- the only bird I've seen [so far] successfully ignore blue jay hijinks. It's a nice contrasting energy to all the high-energy movement of other birds around them.
Plus, the butt-scoot is too cute, and they do it so much.
It's said they are common in IL mostly in the summer, but I don't understand why I've not seen in my area! I see so many others ... maybe one day! Interesting and informative. Thank you Lesley 😊
That's odd. I hope you do see one. They really neat looking
The local flickers came by the other day, with their young one.... they called me outside and made the rolling noise when I brought out some feed... they were teaching the young, making sure they know to come here.... feels like family
Lovely video; thank you for this Lesley.
Thank you to all the people contributed footage of the flicker. Skipping school was a flicker in the 1960s. Wonder who started that. Lol
Thanks for such a comprehensive video on Flickers, Lesley. I live in the Cariboo region of BC, Canada, and share your delight in the beautiful birds.
I’m just starting my 2nd year in the Black Hills of South Dakota, and discovering your videos is a real treat. I’ve been seeing birds here in my back yard that I never saw in California, and some I saw when I lived in Alaska. It was in Alaska where my interest started, living as I did with a wildlife artist and his family. They were avid birders and shared with me their experience, awe, and respect for birds and their behavior. My education now continues with your beautifully detailed and informative videos. Thank you!
Wonderful footage of these delightful birds. Thank you!
Very nice, thanks! My Flickers have a tough time with the Starlings running them out of the nest that they worked so hard to make.
Awe poor things 😔
I've had a sudden influx of starlings at my feeders this year. The worst year for them in a decade of feeding at my yard. So bad that I switched over from hot pepper to regular suet so that the squirrels would help run off the starlings. S. vulgaris indeed.
I like the name yellow hammer 😊
In our backyard in suburban Kansas, we frequently see Northern Flickers if we put out food they especially like--suet and mealworm cakes in particular. We have the yellow-shafted variety with the black "moustaches" on the male birds. They really are splendid in their polka-dotted waistcoats!
I recently moved to a large rural property. I’m so happy to see flickers for the first time. I sprinkle some seeds in the grass near my house since I love mourning doves. Every day, always in the 4:00 hour, the mourning doves and flickers fill my yard. The mourning doves are the most low key birds; I wonder what they’re thinking as they look around at the frenetic flickers. I’ve had to have some dead trees taken down for safety reasons, but I left many for my friends. I have so many woodpeckers of all types, even had my first sighting of a pileated…named Woody, of course. 😎
I have a couple fledglings in my yard this summer and the parents are never far away, they are so entertaining!
They are so comical. How lucky that you have them in your yard 🐦
We see them in our backyard sometimes - Buffalo, NY. Thanks for the info, great video!
It's a beautiful bird. I remember the first time I saw one at my birdfeeder in winter. I had to look it up in a book because I had never seen one before. They were very infrequent and only showed up during bitter cold spells when it was zero or below, rare in the Ohio Valley.
Just found one in my yard on Long Island, New York! Heard their cry first and it was so unfamiliar to me, I had to find out what kind of bird made this sound. Later, I saw it walking up my back yard stone path, pecking between the stones. I watched it for a long time. Beautiful and Fascinating. I googled a description and saw it’s unmistakable markings and colors. I listened to recordings of its call and knew I had found my bird!
Super Lesley! Thank you so much, and everyone who contributed!
Thank you so much Maggie 🤗🐦
I am lucky to have a pair in my yard - the yellow shafts flicker beautifully in flight. The calls are distinct, you can't mistake them for any other bird! The red patch on the back of the head/neck is heart shaped on my little family!
The photo by Larry Blew was especially awesome. It would make an excellent print. Always enjoy your videos. Your delivery is so calming, relaxing and pleasant!
I've had the Downy and Red-bellied Woodpeckers coming all winter and now into summer to my feeder I keep in a mini wishing well. Today for the 1st time I spotted a Northern Flicker out in the yard going around the wishing well, I suppose it was finding the nuts I'd sprinkled around the yard in an effort to try to keep the squirrels and ground squirrels out of my bird feeders. So I guess as of today I now have 3 different varieties of woodpeckers coming around and I am enjoying it. Love to hear their tapping up in the trees around the house.
Thanks for sharing Lesley. Appreciate your time and research. Great job sister. Kool bird.
Thank you 🤗🐦☺️
Loved your story on Crows
I am a Crow lover.I like. To feed them. Rory
I love Flickers, and am lucky enough to have some living in the woods near me. As always, your videos are informative, entertaining, and beautifully done!
this was so good, L!
once again, a species i get in my back yard in DROVES. everyones bringing the kids round.
yellows and red shafted can interbreed too!
thank you so much for all the hard work and good stuff.
Wow 😍
Flickers are awesome!
Yes they are shy :)
I have lots of them. Noisy guys!! They do feed on the ground a lot. I have the red here in Michigan.
A red pair showed up in my yard last summer. Possibly due to the forest fires north of here. Didn't see them all winter. They came back this spring-well a couple showed up! This evening the mommy brought the baby to the feeders on the deck!
I didn't know what type of Bird they were-Thank you so very much for this lovely, educational video!💖
I saw one this morning while doing a morning hike in Monmouth County New Jersey. It was in a dead tree pecking away. I had the fortune of watching this bird for about 15 minutes before I kept walking on the trail. What a cool sight to see this morning....
thank you for making these videos, as a fellow bird lover i find them fascinating and very entertaining, as well as very good material for inspiration while painting
Great Video Lesley and Jamie
I like how you showed the inside of the nest. I had a mated pair come to my feeder every day lthe past winter except for the days it was storming. Hope you both having great summer
A bird watching friend
Derek
Although I grew up (in Minnesota) with yellow shafted flickersI have seen few in Colorado I have never witnessed red shafted flickers. I find them to be very wonderful birds.
What a pretty bird!
We don’t have these in England, the nearest equivalent is our Greater Spotted Woodpecker.
Great video!! Omg they’re so cute! The one clip of the flicker hopping around in the grass was way too adorable 🥰😍🥰
Rural north east CT we have many of these in the yard and I'm so thankful. We feed them but mostly they like the bugs we attract.
I’d also like to add that they’re oddly not very aggressive for their size. They’re super timid at suet feeders, often acquiescing to grackles or starlings.
I’ve noticed however that red-bellies often keep away from flickers, patiently waiting their turn for feeder time. Meanwhile you have red-bellies pecking at grackles or starlings. I guess it’s a size thing.
Great video nonetheless!!
Hahah that's interesting about the red bellies not picking on the flickers like they do the starlings and others. You are right too, flickers do not seem very aggressive at all
I laughed so much at the cow patty part.
Thanks for all the hard work you put into this video. It's wonderful to see so much footage of the Flickers as I've found them to be a bird you hear more often than you see in Seeleys Bay on the Rideau Canal, just above Kingston, Ontario, Canada.
Ahhhhhh, yes! I know that sound, so VERY well :)
They're a beautiful plumage, and fun, backyard bird hunt with our 3 kids(ages 10, 6 and 3). Thank you, for another helpful video. Now, we need to figure out the if our Flickers have red or yellow :)
Love this bird so much! I've found many feathers along my journey 🤍
Flicker feathers… Lucky you! ☘️ I can imagine Flicker feathers are about as detailed as Wild Turkeys. 🦃🪶
@@BirdsandGhibliFan I'll maybe somehow share it on here
Fantastic video! These are some of my favorite birds. I had a family living in my roof all last year and always enjoyed watching them poke their heads out to see what was going on in the outside world. Thanks for the great content!
Your work is amazing. My fiance and I love your videos, and you do an fantastic job bringing to life the magic of wild birds.
Thank you so much 😀
I love them! I always thought it looked like they were wearing a polka dot top with a black tee shirt underneath. 😀
It has been two years since I have watched this video. The Yellow Shafter Northern Flicker is still the most fascinating bird in central Illinois.
You solved my conundrum! Several years ago, I had a bird that would drum on a metal bucket sitting on my handpump well. This was after it decided that the highway sign across the road wasn’t loud enough. It inspired me to write a blog post about it, calling it The Local Woodpecker Pickup Joint. Of course, I thought it was a woodpecker but you have confirmed it was a flicker.
So sad to hear about their difficulty, as they are quite funny.
We have Flickers in SW Washington. They very fun to watch.
I was just wondering who makes this call after hearing it today in Luskville, QC. You always have the answers to all of my birding questions! Thank you for this beautiful video. 🙂
These are beautiful birds. They have such a variation in markings and colors depending on how you see them perching one way, flying seen from below another, flying seen from above another. They seem to be very smart. Have seen them using a short stick as a tool to dig under pine needles looking for food in my yard.