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Woken
by the woodpecker tapping at the window
Whenever I'm travelling between Ilkley and Keighley at this time
of year I always glance up at the rookery at the roundabout on the
Addingham bypass. Last week I was pleased to see signs of activity
- nests much bulkier and their proprietors standing bolt upright
on guard against stick-thieving neighbours. The breeding season
is under way.
A WNS member had dramatic evidence of this recently. Imagine the
scene - 6.50am on a Saturday morning and a nice lie-in to look forward
to, when the peace is rudely shattered by a loud insistent knocking
on the bedroom window.
The unwelcome early caller was a male great spotted woodpecker,
enthusiastically dramming on the Velux frame and thus proclaiming
his territorial rights on what, for him, must have seemed like a
satisfyingly resonant surface. He returned an hour later for an
encore. Our naturalist friend has a peanut feeder which is regularly
visited by both the male and female great spotted, and they'd obviously
been eyeing up the local amenities.
These are the commonest of our three local woodpecker species,
about blackbird size, with smart black and white plumage and, in
the case of the male, a red patch at the back of the head. They
are now regular visitors to garden bird feeders and, if our friend
is lucky, she may be entertained in a few months time by the sight
of a parent bird teaching one or two juveniles how to use her peanut
feeder.
The lesser-spotted woodpecker, sparrow sized, neatly chequered
black and white with a crimson cap, is much rarer, and more difficult
to see as it tends to feed up in the woodland canopy. However, pairs
have been known to nest in Middleton Woods, and this time of year,
with a clear view through the bare branches, is a good time to see
them. During the next couple of months both greater and lesser males
will be advertising their presence with rapidly drummed tattoos
on dead tree trunks or branches, the sound carrying for a considerable
distance. I have heard that it is possible to lure a male woodpecker
towards you by imitating his rat-a-tat with a pebble on a tree trunk.
It's never worked yet, but I live in hope.
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