Swamp-Cork wrote:
Unfortunately we had to have a very old white oak removed in April of 2014 as it was dying, although we had tried to save it. Our tree person estimated it to be 175 years old, but for sure it probably was at least more than a century old, and always took for granted it would outlast us. Anyway it was tremendous and leaning out across the water and some of its great limbs extended over our pier. The only way it could be removed and keep it out of the water and also not damage the pier was with the assistance of a crane, and to clear a path for it, two smaller water oaks had to be removed. While the stump of the white oak remains intact, the water oaks have already deteriorated to the point that the woodpecker was feeding on the insects and grubs in the wood. I had been noticing the stumps for quite some time and couldn't imagine what was tearing them apart so rapidly, but thought it must be something powerful like the raccoons, but my wife Ellen recently saw this one feeding on the above stump. It was so close to our home that there was no way I could go outside without it seeing me, so barely opened a back door in the garage just enough to get the lens through and facing in its direction knowing that it would take flight if it saw any movement, and I was only a few feet from it! Clicked off some shots as fast as possible with the above results!
Unfortunately we had to have a very old white oak ... (
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Corky, you are blessed and lucky. I will state what I mean by being lucky. You are an accomplished photographer as anyone can see by your posts. You shoot and practice shooting daily. You have trained your muscles to do what you want done with your camera. None of that is luck. The luck was having your camera handy, a Wife who did everything needed to inform you and not scare the bird and even though you opened the door the Woodpecker still posed for you. Now that is luck.