"The gorgeous Red-headed Woodpecker is so boldly patterned it’s been called a “flying checkerboard,” with an entirely crimson head, a snow-white body, and half white, half inky black wings." (The Cornell Lab of Ornithology 'All About Birds')

Guess who came to visit Tiger Gardens on a recent frigid day in January? The wonderfully colored red-headed woodpecker showed up on my waterfall. I was so excited I ran to get my camera and was able to snap a few shots of this beautiful woodpecker in order to document the sighting. You see, these woodpeckers have declined over the past of up to 70% according to Cornell. This decline has been primarily in Florida and the Great Lakes. The decline is in part due to loss of habitat and also due to the fact that once upon a time these woodpeckers were so abundant that bounties were placed on their heads and they were also often hit by cars. I was telling a local friend that one of these red headed woodpeckers had come to visit and she said she has them all over the place on her property just down the road. I guess the population of red headed woodpeckers in this part of Tennessee is pretty healthy based on her sightings.

I am so happy to find not only this woodpecker in Tiger Gardens but also a yellow bellied sapsucker, and small woodpeckers such as downy and hairy woodpeckers. All woodpeckers eat insects and add to the biodiversity of the garden. The red-headed woodpecker will actually eat mice! All the better for Tiger Gardens!

This is not the first time the waterfall has attracted neat and wonderful birds but this is the first time I was able to capture the visit in photos....
in the garden....
Words and Photos Property of In the Garden Blog Team, In the Garden

Guess who came to visit Tiger Gardens on a recent frigid day in January? The wonderfully colored red-headed woodpecker showed up on my waterfall. I was so excited I ran to get my camera and was able to snap a few shots of this beautiful woodpecker in order to document the sighting. You see, these woodpeckers have declined over the past of up to 70% according to Cornell. This decline has been primarily in Florida and the Great Lakes. The decline is in part due to loss of habitat and also due to the fact that once upon a time these woodpeckers were so abundant that bounties were placed on their heads and they were also often hit by cars. I was telling a local friend that one of these red headed woodpeckers had come to visit and she said she has them all over the place on her property just down the road. I guess the population of red headed woodpeckers in this part of Tennessee is pretty healthy based on her sightings.

I am so happy to find not only this woodpecker in Tiger Gardens but also a yellow bellied sapsucker, and small woodpeckers such as downy and hairy woodpeckers. All woodpeckers eat insects and add to the biodiversity of the garden. The red-headed woodpecker will actually eat mice! All the better for Tiger Gardens!

This is not the first time the waterfall has attracted neat and wonderful birds but this is the first time I was able to capture the visit in photos....
in the garden....