The Woodpeckers. Fannie Hardy Eckstorm

The Woodpeckers - Fannie Hardy Eckstorm


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       Fannie Hardy Eckstorm

      The Woodpeckers

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066237790

       FOREWORD: THE RIDDLERS

       I

       HOW TO KNOW A WOODPECKER

       II

       HOW THE WOODPECKER CATCHES A GRUB

       III

       HOW THE WOODPECKER COURTS HIS MATE

       IV

       HOW THE WOODPECKER MAKES A HOUSE

       V

       VI

       FRIEND DOWNY

       VII

       PERSONA NON GRATA

       VIII

       EL CARPINTERO

       IX

       A RED-HEADED COUSIN

       X

       A STUDY OF ACQUIRED HABITS

       XI

       THE WOODPECKER’S TOOLS: HIS BILL

       XII

       THE WOODPECKER’S TOOLS: HIS FOOT

       XIII

       THE WOODPECKER’S TOOLS: HIS TAIL

       XIV

       THE WOODPECKER’S TOOLS: HIS TONGUE

       XV

       HOW EACH WOODPECKER IS FITTED FOR HIS OWN KIND OF LIFE

       XVI

       THE ARGUMENT FROM DESIGN

       APPENDIX

       Explanation of Terms.

       INDEX

       Table of Contents

      Long ago in Greece, the legend runs, a terrible monster called the Sphinx used to waylay travelers to ask them riddles: whoever could not answer these she killed, but the man who did answer them killed her and made an end of her riddling.

      To-day there is no Sphinx to fear, yet the world is full of unguessed riddles. No thoughtful man can go far afield but some bird or flower or stone bars his way with a question demanding an answer; and though many men have been diligently spelling out the answers for many years, and we for the most part must study the answers they have proved, and must reply in their words, yet those shrewd old riddlers, the birds and flowers and bees, are always ready for a new victim, putting their heads together over some new enigma to bar the road to knowledge till that, too, shall be answered; so that other men’s learning does not always suffice. So much of a man’s pleasure in life, so much of his power, depends on his ability to silence these persistent questioners, that this little book was written with the hope of making clearer the kind of questions Dame Nature asks, and the way to get correct answers.

      This is purposely a little book, dealing only with a single group of birds, treating particularly only some of the commoner species of that group, taking up only a few of the problems that present themselves to the naturalist for solution, and aiming rather to make the reader acquainted with the birds than learned about them.

      The woodpeckers were selected in preference to any other family because they are patient under observation, easily identified, resident in all parts of the country both in summer and in winter, and because more than any other birds they leave behind them records of their work which may be studied after the birds have flown. The book provides ample means for identifying every species and subspecies of woodpecker known in North America, though only five of the commonest and most interesting species have been selected for special study. At least three of these five should be found in almost every part of the country. The Californian woodpecker is never seen in the East, nor the red-headed in the far West, but the downy and the hairy are resident nearly everywhere, and some species of the flickers and sapsuckers, if not always the ones chosen for special notice, are visitors in most localities.

      Look for the woodpeckers in orchards and along the edges of thickets, among tangles of wild grapes and in patches of low, wild berries, upon which they often feed, among dead trees and in the track of forest fires. Wherever there are boring larvæ, beetles, ants, grasshoppers, the fruit of poison-ivy, dogwood, june-berry, wild cherry or wild grapes, woodpeckers may be confidently looked for if there are any in the neighborhood. Be patient, persistent, wide-awake, sure that


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