Bird Sightings

All of our bird sightings

Downy Woodpecker Make A visit

Filed under Downy Woodpecker by

Every day I get a pair of Red Bellied woodpeckers in my yard but today I had a Downy Woodpecker ( Picoides pubescens ) stop by.

This little Downy Woodpecker let me get quite close a take a quick snapshot with my digital camera. The Downy Woodpecker is the smallest woodpecker in North America and it ranges from coast to coast, from North to South.

It is very easy to tell the difference in the male and female Downy Woodpecker. The Male Downy woodpecker has a small red patch at the back of his red and the female Downy woodpecker does not. The one that made a visit to my yard was a Female.

Part of the Downy woodpecker’s diet is Poison Ivy seeds and I have a ton of it growing in my backyard. I see them often and usually in pairs. It is fun to watch them as they bounce along the tree trunks, thumping with their little beaks. I recorded this sighting in my PDA.

Downy Woodpecker

Great Blue Heron or Ardea herdias

Filed under Bird Sightings, Lake Woodruff by

The Great Blue Heron or Ardea herdias is a common sight throughout Florida.

This big crane like bird is always fun to watch. They will hunt silenty for fish along the water’s edge. They can be perfectly motionless, waiting for a small fish or other prey item to come within it’s reach, then like lightning it strikes with it’s spear like beak!

I don’t know about you but I have tried to catch a fish with my bare hands on several occasions and I can’t do it. I can’t even come close but The Great Blue Heron doesn’t have that problem. It’s speed is simply amazing.

The Great Blue Heron will eat many different things. Fish, frogs, lizards and even snakes! I always see The Great Blue Heron alone. This Great Blue Heron was spotted at Lake Woodruff on a recent trip.

In flight they will coil there very long necks into an s pattern and fly gracefully by. If you are close enough to the Great Blue Heron as it flies by you can actually hear the swoosh of it’s wings as they flap in the air! I recorded this sighting on my PDA.

Great Blue Heron or Ardea herdias