Surprise! It’s a yellow-bellied sapsucker

A yellow-bellied sapsucker pecks the bark on the trunk of a tree.

Few birds were about this morning as I walked the trails at the Mercer Meadows Pole Farm, which made a surprise discovery all the more enjoyable. I’d seen a couple of wedges of Canada geese but little else as I reached the woods half a mile up the trail from the parking lot.

I had a flicker of hope that I might spot an owl tucked into the cedars at the old AT&T Building One site. Park rangers have cordoned that area off with metal barriers, a good sign that either long-eared owls have returned or will do so soon.

I walked around the fenced area and saw nary a bird, let alone an owl. I had not even raised my camera to take a photo, and I turned back toward my car. Just before I reached the edge of the woods, I spotted a bird fly into a tree to my left.

Downy woodpecker was my guess, but then I saw the bird’s long, pointy beak and exultantly decided, hairy woodpecker. The bird was working its way around the tree trunk, affording me fleeting looks at its backside. I moved back and forth to try to get a better look as the bird pecked away. It recoiled just enough for me to get a couple of shots of its head.

A cedar wawwing shown in profile, sitting on a tree branch.
One of the cedar wawwings, basking in the sun.

As I walked into the clear, I spotted two birds perched high up in a tree.. They were cedar waxwings, and I took a few shots through the branches, not expecting much.

But the sun was shining and lit the bird nicely, as I discovered when I got the frames on screen at home. I uploaded photos of one of the waxwings and the putative hairy woodpecker to e-Bird, and that’s when I got my surprise.

Merlin flagged the “woodpecker” images as wrongly placed — they showed a yellow-bellied sapsucker. Only twice before had I recorded a sapsucker at the Pole Farm.

E-bird’s photo recognition capabilities are new, at least in my experience. I’ve been corrected a couple of times in the last several weeks and delighted with that. I want to get my IDs right. It’s even better when the bird is one I don’t often see. 🦅

Yellow-bellied sapsucker clinging to the trunk of a tree, its beak poised to peck at the bark.
Another shot of the sapsucker. Note how closely its breast feathers resemble the tree bark.

Published by Dan

University media executive by day, blogger by night, I am a well-traveled resident of New Jersey

2 thoughts on “Surprise! It’s a yellow-bellied sapsucker

  1. I think I’ve been calling a few yellow-bellied sapsuckers “hairy woodpeckers” for years. 😀 This morning’s walk was a brisk -9°C, and honestly… winter birding really does suck.

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