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In early spring, a male flicker may drum on a metal stovepipe or other resonant surface to attract a mate and proclaim his territory. This doesn't damage your house. If your flicker is drilling for food, you'd better check for carpenter ants or other insects! A flicker may also be excavating a nest cavity. If so, you can put up a nestbox nearby. The pair that adopts it will keep other flickers away. If it's late spring or summer and you discover a big hole, there's probably a brood inside, and it's illegal to disturb them.
BirdNote®
Flicker Attack
Adapted from a script by Chris Peterson
This is BirdNote!
[Loud and brisk sound of a Northern Flicker drumming on a house]
[Loud and brisk sound of a Northern Flicker drumming on a house]
Ah, the Northern Flicker, a bird with a gorgeous Latin name Colaptes auratus – the “golden chiseler.” [Repeat Flicker drumming]
In early spring, a male flicker may drum on a metal stovepipe or other resonant surface to attract a mate and proclaim his territory. [Flicker drumming on pipe]
While this sound can be annoying, it doesn’t damage your house. Your flicker could be drilling for food — a signal that you, too, should be checking to find the source of those carpenter ants or other insects. [Flicker drilling]
In spring, a flicker may also be excavating a nest cavity. Fewer and fewer dead trees mean the birds are looking for alternate sites. If a flicker has started to chisel a cavity, you can put up a nest box nearby. The pair that adopts it will also keep other flickers away. [Aggressive flicker repeated-note call -- the male "spring song."]
If it’s late spring or summer and you discover a big hole, there’s likely a brood inside, and it’s illegal to disturb them.
Find a list of reliable ways to scare away flickers if they’re bothering your house. Visit our website, birdnote.org. [Calls of the Northern Flicker]
For BirdNote, I’m Michael Stein.
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Calls and drumming of the Northern Flicker provided by The Macaulay Library at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, New York. Drumming on wood recorded by D.S. Herr; territorial call recorded by V.W. Ward.
BirdNote's theme music was composed and played by Nancy Rumbel and produced by John Kessler.
Drumming on metal pipe recorded by C. Peterson
Producer: John Kessler
Executive Producer: Dominic Black
© 2010 Tune In to Nature.org BirdNote March 2015/2021
Narrator: Michael Stein
Narrator: Michael Stein
ID# NOFL-03-2010-03-07 NOFL-03