Peter Rabbit was so full of questions
that he hardly knew which one to ask first. But
Yellow Wing the Flicker didn’t give him a chance
to ask any. From the edge of the Green forest
there came a clear, loud call of, “Pe-ok!
Pe-ok! Pe-ok!”
“Excuse me, Peter, there’s
Mrs. Yellow Wing calling me,” exclaimed Yellow
Wing, and away he went. Peter noticed that as
he flew he went up and down. It seemed very much
as if he bounded through the air just as Peter bounds
over the ground. “I would know him by the
way he flies just as far as I could see him,”
thought Peter, as he started for home in the dear
Old Briar-patch. “Somehow he doesn’t
seem like a Woodpecker because he is on the ground
so much. I must ask Jenny Wren about him.”
It was two or three days before Peter
had a chance for a bit of gossip with Jenny Wren.
When he did the first thing he asked was if Yellow
Wing is a true Woodpecker.
“Certainly he is,” replied
Jenny Wren. “Of course he is. Why under
the sun should you think he isn’t?”
“Because it seems to me he is
on the ground more than he’s in the trees,”
retorted Peter. “I don’t know any
other Woodpeckers who come down on the ground at all.”
“Tut, tut, tut, tut!”
scolded Jenny. “Think a minute, Peter!
Think a minute! Haven’t you ever seen Redhead
on the ground?”
Peter blinked his eyes. “Ye-e-s,”
he said slowly. “Come to think of it, I
have. I’ve seen him picking up beechnuts
in the fall. The Woodpeckers are a funny family.
I don’t understand them.”
Just then a long, rolling rat-a-tat-tat
rang out just over their heads. “There’s
another one of them,” chuckled Jenny. “That’s
Downy, the smallest of the whole family. He certainly
makes an awful racket for such a little fellow.
He is a splendid drummer and he’s just as good
a carpenter. He made the very house I am occupying
now.”
Peter was sitting with his head tipped
back trying to see Downy. At first he couldn’t
make him out. Then he caught a little movement
on top of a dead limb. It was Downy’s head
flying back and forth as he beat his long roll.
He was dressed all in black and white. On the
back of his head was a little scarlet patch.
He was making a tremendous racket for such a little
chap, only a little bigger than one of the Sparrow
family.
“Is he making a hole for a nest
up there?” asked Peter eagerly.
“Gracious, Peter, what a question!
What a perfectly silly question!” exclaimed
Jenny Wren scornfully. “Do give us birds
credit for a little common sense. If he were
cutting a hole for a nest, everybody within hearing
would know just where to look for it. Downy has
too much sense in that little head of his to do such
a silly thing as that. When he cuts a hole for
a nest he doesn’t make any more noise than is
absolutely necessary. You don’t see any
chips flying, do you?”
“No-o,” replied Peter
slowly. “Now you speak of it, I don’t.
Is is he hunting for worms in the wood?”
Jenny laughed right out. “Hardly,
Peter, hardly,” said she. “He’s
just drumming, that’s all. That hollow
limb makes the best kind of a drum and Downy is making
the most of it. Just listen to that! There
isn’t a better drummer anywhere.”
But Peter wasn’t satisfied.
Finally he ventured another question. “What’s
he doing it for?”
“Good land, Peter!” cried
Jenny. “What do you run and jump for in
the spring? What is Mr. Wren singing for over
there? Downy is drumming for precisely the same
reason happiness. He can’t run
and jump and he can’t sing, but he can drum.
By the way, do you know that Downy is one of the most
useful birds in the Old Orchard?”
Just then Downy flew away, but hardly
had he disappeared when another drummer took his place.
At first Peter thought Downy had returned until he
noticed that the newcomer was just a bit bigger than
Downy. Jenny Wren’s sharp eyes spied him
at once.
“Hello!” she exclaimed.
“There’s Hairy. Did you ever see two
cousins look more alike? If it were not that
Hairy is bigger than Downy it would be hard work to
tell them apart. Do you see any other difference,
Peter?”
Peter stared and blinked and stared
again, then slowly shook his head. “No,”
he confessed, “I don’t.”
“That shows you haven’t
learned to use your eyes, Peter,” said Jenny
rather sharply. “Look at the outside feathers
of his tail; they are all white. Downy’s
outside tail feathers have little bars of black.
Hairy is just as good a carpenter as is Downy, but
for that matter I don’t know of a member of
the Woodpecker family who isn’t a good carpenter.
Where did you say Yellow Wing the Flicker is making
his home this year?”
“Over in the Big Hickory-tree
by the Smiling Pool,” replied Peter. “I
don’t understand yet why Yellow Wing spends so
much time on the ground.”
“Ants,” replied Jenny
Wren. “Just ants. He’s as fond
of ants as is Old Mr. Toad, and that is saying a great
deal. If Yellow Wing keeps on he’ll become
a ground bird instead of a tree bird. He gets
more than half his living on the ground now.
Speaking of drumming, did you ever hear Yellow Wing
drum on a tin roof?”
Peter shook his head.
“Well, if there’s a tin
roof anywhere around, and Yellow Wing can find it,
he will be perfectly happy. He certainly does
love to make a noise, and tin makes the finest kind
of a drum.”
Just then Jenny was interrupted by
the arrival, on the trunk of the very next tree to
the one on which she was sitting, of a bird about the
size of Sammy Jay. His whole head and neck were
a beautiful, deep red. His breast was pure white,
and his back was black to nearly the beginning of
his tail, where it was white.
“Hello, Redhead!” exclaimed
Jenny Wren. “How did you know we were talking
about your family?”
“Hello, chatterbox,” retorted
Redhead with a twinkle in his eyes. “I
didn’t know you were talking about my family,
but I could have guessed that you were talking about
some one’s family. Does your tongue ever
stop, Jenny?”
Jenny Wren started to become indignant
and scold, then thought better of it. “I
was talking for Peter’s benefit,” said
she, trying to look dignified, a thing quite impossible
for any member of the Wren family to do. “Peter
has always had the idea that true Woodpeckers never
go down on the ground. I was explaining to him
that Yellow Wing is a true Woodpecker, yet spends
half his time on the ground.”
Redhead nodded. “It’s
all on account of ants,” said he. “I
don’t know of any one quite so fond of ants
unless it is Old Mr. Toad. I like a few of them
myself, but Yellow Wing just about lives on them when
he can. You may have noticed that I go down on
the ground myself once in a while. I am rather
fond of beetles, and an occasional grasshopper tastes
very good to me. I like a variety. Yes, sir,
I certainly do like a variety cherries,
blackberries, raspberries, strawberries, grapes.
In fact most kinds of fruit taste good to me, not
to mention beechnuts and acorns when there is no fruit.”
Jenny Wren tossed her head. “You
didn’t mention the eggs of some of your neighbors,”
said she sharply.
Redhead did his best to look innocent,
but Peter noticed that he gave a guilty start and
very abruptly changed the subject, and a moment later
flew away.
“Is it true,” asked Peter,
“that Redhead does such a dreadful thing?”
Jenny bobbed her head rapidly and
jerked her tail. “So I an told,” said
she. “I’ve never seen him do it, but
I know others who have. They say he is no better
than Sammy Jay or Blacky the Crow. But gracious,
goodness! I can’t sit here gossiping forever.”
Jenny twitched her funny little tail, snapped her
bright eyes at Peter, and disappeared in her house.