News

Unicoi County Summer Count took place Saturday, June 14, with 15 observers in six parties. Sharp-eyed counters tallied 107 ...
While hearing woodpeckers do their thing can get a little tiresome, the birds are actually great to have around. Here's how ...
Around the time of the longest day of the year, life bursts at the seams and birdsong fills the air. Since the middle of May, ...
This yellow-bellied sapsucker was photographed off Cripple Creek Road in Ester on May 19. Photo by Josh Spice; Photo by JJ Frost.
Later this month, you can see the Yellow-Bellied Sapsuckers out on Lake Winona. The band, that is. Not the bird. (At least we don’t think the bird is on the ... bill.) The WINONArts series of ...
She's referencing the yellow-bellied sapsucker, a species that migrates through our area. However, she soon realized she was looking at something else entirely. "'Wait, there's too much red on that.
The massive annual spring migration of America's birds – millions of them – is underway. Here's how to follow along at home.
Yellow-bellied sapsuckers use their beaks to drill quarter-inch holes into trees’ bark in very neatly spaced rows to feed on the sap. Courtesy, James Solomon, USDA Forest Service, Bugwood.org ...
The Yellow-bellied Sapsucker winters here in Central Texas. It’s a migratory woodpecker species that summers in a large swath of North American forests from eastern Alaska across Canada to the ...
As a result, sapsuckers may spend quite a bit of time defending their sugar trees from hungry hummingbirds. However, hummingbirds are diabolically fast, so they do manage to pilfer some of the food ...