© Benita Ross

Take 5: Photographers in Action

The 2018 Picture This: Your Great Outdoors photo contest is in full swing and the submissions are rolling in! A lot of folks don’t realize that in addition to wildlife and landscape shots, we also have a People in Nature category.

Here, we’ve compiled five photos of photographers in action, each of which was submitted to the People in Nature category. Have you entered your great nature photos yet? Send in your amazing shots of wildlife, landscapes, plants, fungi, and people in nature today!

Norman Smith Releasing a Snowy Owl © Christopher Blood

Norman Smith Releasing a Snowy Owl © Christopher Blood

© Kathy Diamontopoulos

© Kathy Diamontopoulos

© Benita Ross

© Benita Ross

© Amy Letourneau

© Amy Letourneau

© Erica Tworog-Dube

© Erica Tworog-Dube

Female Northern Flicker © Gates Dupont

Take 5: Northern Flickers

Spotting a Northern Flicker can be truly spectacular. Vocal and conspicuous, flickers may be the most obvious woodpecker in the state of Massachusetts. They don’t visit bird feeders as frequently as their ubiquitous cousins, Downy Woodpeckers, but you may spot one in your backyard or at your birdbath, especially if your yard abuts a wooded area with a mix of trees and open ground. Unlike other woodpeckers, they often feed on the ground, even mixing together with flocks of ground-feeding songbirds, such as robins. Wherever you see one, this handsome bird certainly has unique plumage.

Their tan-brown bodies are patterned with black scalloping or spots, appearing almost polka dotted from a distance. In the East, the undersides of their wing and tail feathers are bright yellow (their Western counterparts have red flight feathers but you won’t see them around here). If you startle one from the ground, you may see a flash of white on its rump. They have a black bib across their breasts, a grey cap with a red nape, and the males sport black “mustache” markings beside their beaks.

These five photos of Northern Flickers were all submitted to our annual Picture This: Your Great Outdoors photo contest. The 2018 contest is open now, so submit your spectacular wildlife and nature photography before the deadline of September 30.

Female Northern Flicker © Cheryl Rose

Female Northern Flicker © Cheryl Rose

Male Northern Flicker © Lee Millet

Male Northern Flicker © Lee Millet

Male Northern Flickers © Ken & Judy Proulx

Male Northern Flickers © Ken & Judy Proulx

Male Northern Flicker © Paul Flanders

Male Northern Flicker © Paul Flanders

Female Northern Flicker © Gates Dupont

Female Northern Flicker © Gates Dupont