![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiO8MOxnGp6GBwwxYTfAPXUBbJB_RyQvehiLn30Ldllbl3jkAIJOuxKaAEKpVZdGgr-YhmT4MM0EYBFRpWGtYHmI-z01zRReWbW9LyUX5z_NkS1azbhCcimonCbUPoeTtZEQPKn3M4EUWXp/s400/flicker_1.jpg)
Every day on my way to work I have been observing two Flickers (Colaptes auatus cafter) feed on the grass boarding a retention pond. Flickers are ubiquitous in our area and are quite large, so they are hard to miss. I had a moment this morning to try and sneak up on them.
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Flickers do commonly feed on the ground, using their large bills to probe for insects. There must be something very tasty in this one spot of grass because I see them there all the time. Perhaps there is an ant colony. Ants make up 45% of a Flickers diet although they will also eat berries, fruit, nuts.