woodpecker question

Will and Joan Wolfe willjoanwolfe at betsievalley.net
Mon Oct 15 22:32:27 EDT 2007


Thanks a thousand times, Chip.     Ernie Hoover also suggested hanging pans or other shiny object to see if it deters  the bird  or he might  try a fake owl.  He also said that if the new siding is cedar, that attracts insects.  A friend of his who put up new cedar siding had the same problem. As for our flicker, I didn't mean to imply that his drumming was for insects--but glad to know why he was doing it.   Again, many thanks.  Joan -- Original Message ----- 
  From: Francke 
  To: Will and Joan Wolfe ; Mich-chat 
  Sent: Sunday, October 14, 2007 6:07 PM
  Subject: Re: woodpecker question


  Common question and common behavior for a variety of MI woodpeckers.  Here is what I think is going one.  First of all, your comment regarding woodpeckers "pecking" on metal stove pipes, etc. is common when they are attracting mates and establishing/defending territories.  They will find the most resonating object they can find(wood , metal or other) for this drumming.  This does not lead to holes in wood, so this is not your friends problem.

  Woodpeckers search for food in much the same way we might search for a stud in a wall.  Pounding the wall with a hammer and listening to the sound tells you if it is hollow behind the wall or solid (when there is a stud present).  Woodpeckers do the same thing (in reverse) and they will peck on wood until they hear/feel a hollow area which to them means possible food.  So they drill a hole to investigate and hope to find insects.  When they don't find any insects, they move over a few inches/feet and try again and keep repeating this process.  As you know, wood siding is attached to wood studs (every 18-24" apart) and between the studs it is hollow (except for insulation).  They find the hollow sound between the studs which provides the stimulus for the birds to make holes, even though there are not any insects in the wood.  My only solution is to provide food for the woodpeckers (hang suet) near the problem area and maybe they will eat the suet and leave the house alone.

  Chip Francke
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: Will and Joan Wolfe 
    To: Mich-chat 
    Sent: Saturday, October 13, 2007 10:41 PM
    Subject: woodpecker question


    Haven't had this question in a long time, and can't remember the answer, if any.
    A friend has a Hairy Woodpecker driving him mad as it incessantly drums on his house's siding.  When we questioned whether there could be insects in the wood that it was going after, he said that the siding is only two days old.    Could the insects underneath have been aroused?  I also know that woodpeckers "just do this" (as a flicker did on an exhaust pipe on our roof.  It finally just quit.). 

    Aside from finding out whether he has an insect problem (and then how do you handle it?)  -- Do any of you have  any solutions to a woodpecker's  nuisance-drumming?

    Thanks for any ideas,   Joan  Wolfe  


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