Subject: [Tweeters] Lewis's Woodpeckers migrating high in the Cascades-4 Se ptember
Date: Fri Sep 4 19:06:59 PDT 2020
From: Wilson Cady - gorgebirds at juno.com

We had a single woodpecker with dark underparts fly over our place on top of a 1,000' ridge in western Skamania County today for the second day in a row. We did not see any other identifying marks but suspected that they were Lewis's Woodpeckers which we have had here before. Wilson Cady
Columbia River Gorge, WA

---------- Original Message ----------
From: Jim Danzenbaker <jdanzenbaker at gmail.com>
To: Andy Stepniewski <steppie at nwinfo.net>, tweeters tweeters <tweeters at u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: [Tweeters] Lewis's Woodpeckers migrating high in the Cascades-4 September
Date: Fri, 4 Sep 2020 18:45:35 -0700


Hi Andy, I read your post with interest as I always look for (and never find any) Lewis's Woodpeckers in the Fall (or any other time) in Clark County. I was glad to find an immature this morning perched atop a dead tree in the foothills of eastern Clark County. Randy Hill mentioned seeing a movement of them at Bethel Ridge, Yakima County and now your report of birds on the move. In the foothills of Clark County including Larch Mountain, we're going to have a forecasted heavy east wind event early to mid next week so I'll be looking for more Lewis's Woodpeckers to be blown into our county. Maybe they will be accompanied by other central Cascade migrants! Hopefully wildfires won't also be blown in. Stay well and be safe. Keep your eyes and ears skyward. Jim
On Fri, Sep 4, 2020 at 4:54 PM Andy Stepniewski <steppie at nwinfo.net> wrote:Yakkers and Tweeters,

This morning I escaped the heat and smoke in Yakima and headed west up to Chinook Pass on the Cascade crest, at the east entrance of Mt. Rainier National Park. I had three target birds: Black Swift, Pine Grosbeak, and White-winged Crossbill. In three hours of observation in the pass area, I dipped on all three of my targets. On my descent on SR-410, 2.5 miles east of the pass, I stopped at a pullout to scan the skies one more time. I caught sight of several Lewis's Woodpeckers above me on the ridge, which tops out at about 6,000 feet elevation. At first I thought they might be flycatching from the many dead whitebark pines on the steep slopes above, victims of White Pine Blister Rust. After a moment, it was apparent these woodpeckers were heading southwest overhead and there were at least seven birds, I lost sight of this loose group crossing over the beautiful glacier-carved valley of the Rainier Fork of the American River. I can't recall seeing Lewis's Woodpeckers migrating in the subalpine zone. Birds of Washington (Wahl et al.) states "timing of migration varies locally, but birds generally depart in August or early September."

Andy Stepniewski
Yakima WA
steppie at nwinfo.net

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Jim Danzenbaker
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