February 21, 2025

East Texas Birding

East Texas Bird Identification, Birding Trips, Blogs, & Photo Workshops

Get Back! No Pictures For You

I try to have a picture with each of these little messages, blogs, stories or whatever they are, but this time I was not fast enough to take one.

I was grilling butterfly pork chops and turned to go back in the RV to get a plate when I saw a large bird out of the corner of my eye.  I looked up and there was a Pileated Woodpecker flying from one tree to another just about 100 feet away.  I stepped inside and grabbed my Nikon D60 with a 200 mm lens on it.  I walked slowly towards the tree but only got a few steps when he took off for the far beyond.  No chance to get a picture.

Hopefully, I will get another chance.  I believe he came from the woods across the highway where I usually walk and perhaps I will catch up with him there soon.  I haven’t been walking over there lately because of all the rain.  It is really muddy over there with the slightest rain.  With the nearly constant rain for the past 3 months, it is really sloppy over there.

I have seen Pileated Woodpeckers before but this is the first one I’ve seen at Lake O’ the Pines.  A long time ago I spent a few days in Martin Dies State Park on the northern edge of the Big Thicket.  They were fairly common there and I saw quite a few of them but that was years ago.

They are such an impressive bird.  You won’t have trouble mistaking them for another woodpecker.  They are much larger.  The only one that came close was the Ivory Billed Woodpecker which is very likely extinct and was about the same size.  There is no comparison to the other local woodpeckers which are quite a bit smaller: Red-Headed, Red-Bellied, and Downey.

When I catch him in the lens, I will post it here and go into a little more detail about them. 

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Author

  • MichaelM

    I’m a proud East Texas native who once took the scenic route all the way from the Atlantic to the Pacific—just to realize the Piney Woods was where I really belonged - near where I hear rumors of home.

    Since planting my boots firmly back in East Texas in 2014, I’ve put my biology background to work first as a Texas Master Naturalist, then for three years I served as as the Trip Director for Tyler Audubon. I run several Facebook birding groups, several nature related websites, teach Nature Photography Workshops, lead Birding Field Trips, and, on any given day, you’ll likely find me wandering through the woods, camera in hand.

    As an author, photographer, and lifelong naturalist, I believe in spreading the word about birds, wildlife and wild places so we can all appreciate—and protect—the world outside our windows. It's all part of the adventure, right?

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