<h2>I</h2>
<h3>HOW TO KNOW A WOODPECKER</h3>
<p>The woodpecker is the easiest of all birds to
recognize. Even if entirely new to you, you may
readily decide whether a bird is a woodpecker or
not.</p>
<p>The woodpecker is always striking and is
often gay in color. He is usually noisy, and his
note is clear and characteristic. His shape and
habits are peculiar, so that whenever you see a
bird clinging to the side of a tree “as if he had
been thrown at it and stuck,” you may safely
call him a woodpecker. Not that all birds which
cling to the bark of trees are woodpeckers,—for
the chickadees, the crested titmice, the nuthatches,
the brown creepers, and a few others
like the kinglets and some wrens and wood-warblers
more or less habitually climb up and down
the tree-trunks; but these do it with a pretty
grace wholly unlike the woodpecker’s awkward,
cling-fast way of holding on. As the largest of
these is smaller than the smallest woodpecker,
and as none of them (excepting only the tiny<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[5]</SPAN></span>
kinglets) ever shows the patch of yellow or scarlet
which always marks the head of the male
woodpecker, and which sometimes adorns his
mate, there is no danger of making mistakes.</p>
<p>The nuthatches are the only birds likely to
be confused with woodpeckers, and these have
the peculiar habit of traveling down a tree-trunk
with their heads pointing to the ground. A
woodpecker never does this; he may move down
the trunk of the tree he is working on, but he
will do it by hopping backward. A still surer
sign of the woodpecker is the way he sits upon
his tail, using it to brace him. No other birds
except the chimney swift and the little brown
creeper ever do this. A sure mark, also, is his
feet, which have two toes turned forward and
two turned backward. We find this arrangement
in no other North American birds except
the cuckoos and our one native parroquet. However,
there is one small group of woodpeckers
which have but three toes, and these are the only
North American land-birds that do not have four
well-developed toes.</p>
<p>In coloration the woodpeckers show a strong
family likeness. Except in some young birds,
the color is always brilliant and often is gaudy.
Usually it shows much clear black and white,
with dashes of scarlet or yellow about the head.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[6]</SPAN></span>
Sometimes the colors are “solid,” as in the red-headed
woodpecker; sometimes they lie in close
bars, as in the red-bellied species; sometimes in
spots and stripes, as in the downy and hairy;
but there is always a <i>contrast</i>, never any blending
of hues. The red or yellow is laid on in
well-defined patches—square, oblong, or crescentic—upon
the crown, the nape, the jaws, or
the throat; or else in stripes or streaks down
the sides of the head and neck, as in the logcock,
or pileated woodpecker.</p>
<p>There is no rule about the color markings of
the sexes, as in some families of birds. Usually
the female lacks all the bright markings of the
male; sometimes, as in the logcock, she has them
but in more restricted areas; sometimes, as in
the flickers, she has all but one of the male’s
color patches; and in a few species, as the red-headed
and Lewis’s woodpeckers, the two sexes
are precisely alike in color. In the black-breasted
woodpecker, sometimes called Williamson’s
sapsucker, the male and female are so
totally different that they were long described
and named as different birds. It sometimes
happens that a young female will show the color
marks of the male, but will retain them only the
first year.</p>
<p>Though the woodpeckers cling to the trunks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[7]</SPAN></span>
of trees, they are not exclusively climbing birds.
Some kinds, like the flickers, are quite as frequently
found on the ground, wading in the
grass like meadowlarks. Often we may frighten
them from the tangled vines of the frost grape
and the branches of wild cherry trees, or from
clumps of poison-ivy, whither they come to eat
the fruit. The red-headed woodpecker is fond
of sitting on fence posts and telegraph poles;
and both he and the flicker frequently alight on
the roofs of barns and houses and go pecking
and pattering over the shingles. The sapsuckers
and several other kinds will perch on dead limbs,
like a flycatcher, on the watch for insects; the
flickers, and more rarely other kinds, will sit
crosswise of a limb instead of crouching lengthwise
of it, as is the custom with woodpeckers.</p>
<p>All these points you will soon learn. You
will become familiar with the form, the flight,
and the calls of the different woodpeckers; you
will learn not only to know them by name, but
to understand their characters; they will become
your acquaintances, and later on your friends.</p>
<p>This heavy bird, with straight, chisel bill and
sharp-pointed tail-feathers; with his short legs
and wide, flapping wings, his unmusical but not
disagreeable voice, and his heavy, undulating,
business-like flight, is distinctly bourgeois, the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[8]</SPAN></span>
type of a bird devoted to business and enjoying
it. No other bird has so much work to do all
the year round, and none performs his task with
more energy and sense. The woodpecker makes
no aristocratic pretensions, puts on none of the
coy graces and affectations of the professional
singer; even his gay clothes fit him less jauntily
than they would another bird. He is artisan to
the backbone,—a plain, hard-working, useful
citizen, spending his life in hammering holes in
anything that appears to need a hole in it. Yet
he is neither morose nor unsocial. There is a
vein of humor in him, a large reserve of mirth
and jollity. We see little of it except in the
spring, and then for a time all the laughter in
him bubbles up; he becomes uproarious in his
glee, and the melody which he cannot vent in
song he works out in the channels of his trade,
filling the woodland with loud and harmonious
rappings. Above all other birds he is the friend
of man, and deserves to have the freedom of the
fields.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</SPAN></span></p>
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