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A team of dedicated board members, volunteers, and student interns has published every page in Volume 9. This volume includes 360 images of paintings and lyrical descriptions of birds, now available online for everyone to enjoy anywhere in the world. This is a monumental task. Each volume requires approximately 400 hours to photograph, edit, transcribe, catalog, and publish online. We need your support to complete this work.
If you're tech-savvy, have a good eye, are meticulous with details, and love structured data, please consider volunteering by emailing us at hello@rexbrasher.org.
We encourage all bird lovers and supporters to consider a monetary donation to support our mission to make Rex's work available for everyone. You can provide a one-time or recurring donation online.
If birds were arranged by habits, not structure, LEWIS WOODPECKER would fall into the Jay class. They fly on a level without undulation, alight on branches oftener than on trunks, feed freely on the ground or catch insects expertly on the wing, gather in flocks and are noisy during the Spring and live largely on a diet of fruit. Certainly not a summary of Woodpecker characteristics. The hoarding instinct shows feebly when they stow acorns into natural cavities, their bill chiseling capacity being even weaker than the Flickers.
From southern British Columbia and southern Alberta south to Arizona and New Mexico. West to California coast ranges, east to Dakota, western Nebraska and western Texas.
A 50-foot tree distributed on eastern slope of Rocky Mountains from Canada to Texas.