Northern Flicker
Year-round ResidentAbout the Northern Flicker
A large, ground-foraging woodpecker. Colorado hosts the red-shafted variety with salmon-pink wing linings.
When to See Them in Colorado
Year-round. The Northern Flicker is a permanent resident along the Front Range and one of Colorado's most reliable backyard visitors. You can spot them at your feeders in every season — from the depths of a Denver winter to the peak of summer heat. Their population tends to peak in late fall and winter when resident birds flock together and become even more feeder-dependent.
Birding tip: Morning hours — especially the first two hours after sunrise — are when resident species like the Northern Flicker are most active and vocal. Set up your feeders in a spot with good sightlines from a window and you'll rarely miss them.
What They Eat
In Colorado, the Northern Flicker's diet reflects what's locally available across seasons. At feeders, they're most drawn to Suet, peanuts, mealworms, which mirrors the high-energy foods they seek in the wild. Offering the right food in the right feeder is the single biggest factor in successfully attracting Northern Flickers to your yard.
During nesting season (typically April–July on the Front Range), Northern Flickers also rely heavily on insects as a protein source for their young — so a pesticide-free garden benefits them beyond just the feeder.
How to Attract Them to Your Yard
Creating a welcoming habitat for Northern Flickers in Colorado is straightforward once you understand what they need. Here are the most effective steps our experts recommend:
- Hang a suet cage loaded with a high-fat suet cake. In Colorado's cold winters, suet provides the caloric density birds need to survive freezing overnight temperatures.
- Add a peanut feeder or tray filled with shelled or in-shell peanuts. High in protein and fat, peanuts attract Northern Flickers and a wide variety of other backyard species.
- Offer live or dried mealworms in a shallow dish. Northern Flickers are highly responsive to this protein-rich food, especially during breeding season when they're feeding nestlings.
- Provide a clean water source year-round. A heated bird bath is one of the best investments you can make for winter birding along the Front Range — fresh water is often scarcer than food on cold days.
- Plant native shrubs and trees that produce berries or shelter nesting birds. Serviceberry, chokecherry, and native viburnums are excellent choices for Colorado front-range gardens.
- Keep feeders within 3 feet or beyond 30 feet of windows to minimize window strike risk — the most common cause of feeder-bird fatalities.
- Clean feeders regularly. Moldy or wet seed drives birds away and can spread disease through your local bird population. WBU No-Mess blends minimize hulls and spoilage.
Attract More Northern Flickers to Your Yard
The right combination of food, feeders, and water makes all the difference. Our Colorado-tested recommendations:
No-Mess Seed Blends
Our signature Colorado blends are formulated for Front Range birds and contain no filler seed. Shell-free — no mess under your feeder, and every kernel gets eaten.
Shop Seed BlendsSuet & Suet Feeders
High-calorie suet cakes are a winter staple for clinging birds like Northern Flickers. Our tail-prop suet cages accommodate woodpecker-style feeders for the full dining experience.
Shop SuetBird Baths & Water Features
Fresh water draws more birds than any feeder. Our heated bird baths keep water liquid through Colorado's subzero nights — and the dripper adds the sound motion that catches birds' attention from far away.
Shop Bird Baths