[birding] E.E. Wilson sapsucker appears to be a Yellow-belliedSapsucker-PICTURES

Cheryl Whelchel dirtgirl16cr125 at msn.com
Fri Dec 25 15:39:28 PST 2009


Rich Armstrong called me about 1:30 to say Joel had finally had a good look at the bird, so I ran out and took these 15 pictures.  I hope they are good enough to positively validate Joel's ID.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/vgswallow16/<http://www.flickr.com/photos/vgswallow16/>

Cheryl Whelchel
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Joel Geier<mailto:joel.geier at peak.org> 
  To: Oregon Birders OnLine<mailto:obol at oregonbirdwatch.org> ; MidValley Birds<mailto:list at midvalleybirding.org> 
  Sent: Friday, December 25, 2009 3:04 PM
  Subject: [birding] E.E. Wilson sapsucker appears to be a Yellow-belliedSapsucker


  Hello folks,

  OK, the photo is pathetic since it turns out that I have no idea how to
  point a pocket digital camera with the viewfinder on the back. But among
  the various nice shots of tree branches and sky, here is a clip from one
  that turned out to have a sapsucker right at the bottom edge of the
  photo.

  http://www.oregonbirds.org/BirdPhotos<http://www.oregonbirds.org/BirdPhotos>

  I did have better views through binoculars today and am now pretty well
  convinced that the sapsucker hanging around the south side of E.E.
  Wilson headquarters, originally found by Rich & Nanette Armstrong and
  Tristen Gholsen during Sunday's Airlie-Albany CBC, is a YELLOW-BELLIED
  SAPSUCKER. 

  The impression I had of a crisper, adult head pattern must have been a
  trick of the gloom in the brief view I had on the 22nd. In my views
  today, the impression of lots of white on the head holds up, but the
  darker parts of the head pattern are brownish rather than black, while
  the lighter parts are a grungy white. 

  I had a clear, extended view of the back of the bird's head today. The
  nape is pale (grungy white). The darker feathers on the bird's crest
  jsut above this did look as if they might be red in less direct light
  (it was very bright light today, and I couldn't see colors well from
  that angle), so that might give an impression of a red nape in a quick
  view. 

  In a side view with its throat shaded, the bird had a patch of red on
  the throat, bordered by a fairly broad blackish-brown swath covering the
  rest of the "shield" area, with grungy yellowish gray on the lower
  breast, flanks and belly. The back is mottled brown and white, with
  mottled black and white showing on the folded primaries and tail.

  It would be nice to get some better photos by someone with a better
  camera or who at least knows how to point one in the right direction.
  But everything I saw today points to this being a Yellow-bellied
  Sapsucker, including its generally juvenal appearance at this time of
  year.

  Happy birding,
  Joel

  P.S. Sorry for any confusion caused by my reference to "Yellow-breasted"
  Sapsucker, which I guess would be a different sort of hybrid altogether.
  Thanks Rich for straightening me out on that.

  --
  Joel Geier
  Camp Adair area north of Corvallis



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