Wings over Whidbey Dinner featuring Paul Bannick and Orlando's Southern Barbecue

$50.00

Join us for a very special dinner, catered by Orlando’s Southern Barbecue, featuring a presentation by Paul Bannick based upon his new book:

Woodpecker: A Year in the Life of North American Woodpeckers

September 25th, 2026 | 5:00 PM Doors | 6:30 PM Presentation
Whidbey Island Nordic Lodge | 63 Jacobs Rd, Coupeville, Washington

Woodpecker: A Year in the Live of North American Woodpeckers is a stunning follow-up to Bannick’s award-winning title, Owl: A Year in the Lives of North American Owls, giving bird lovers yet another gorgeous photographic tribute, engaging natural history, and a compelling call to preserve the habitats that sustain these most iconic of birds.

In both, award-winning photographer Paul Bannick uses his intimate yet dramatic images, up-to-date science and first hand narratives to explore the lives of North American Woodpeckers through four seasons including; courtship, mating, and nesting in spring; fledging and feeding of young in summer; dispersal and learning independence in fall; and, finally winter movements and survival. His exploration of these impactful birds and their habitats includes the species from the Arctic through southern Mexico, including those of the Caribbean Islands. Bannick’s startling images reflect their shared behaviors as well as some surprising exceptions and adaptations. More than just a backdrop, the varied habitats reveal wildly rich stories of their own.

Paul Bannick’s camera work is so revelatory that Woodpecker is like sight for the blind. Never has this keystone species been portrayed so intimately. His prose explains that the extraordinary hammering that seems like tree vandalism is actually the work of forest doctors, as vital as they are beautiful. A lovely, informative book.

—William Dietrich, author of The Final Forest

No other author/photographer has come close to creating a book like this. Bannick’s photos are breathtaking, his prose elegant, his knowledge of woodpeckers encyclopedic. If you love birds, read it. Then keep it handy because it has a second function as a field guide.

—Ted Williams, former editor of Audubon Magazine and award-winning wildlife writer

Join us for a very special dinner, catered by Orlando’s Southern Barbecue, featuring a presentation by Paul Bannick based upon his new book:

Woodpecker: A Year in the Life of North American Woodpeckers

September 25th, 2026 | 5:00 PM Doors | 6:30 PM Presentation
Whidbey Island Nordic Lodge | 63 Jacobs Rd, Coupeville, Washington

Woodpecker: A Year in the Live of North American Woodpeckers is a stunning follow-up to Bannick’s award-winning title, Owl: A Year in the Lives of North American Owls, giving bird lovers yet another gorgeous photographic tribute, engaging natural history, and a compelling call to preserve the habitats that sustain these most iconic of birds.

In both, award-winning photographer Paul Bannick uses his intimate yet dramatic images, up-to-date science and first hand narratives to explore the lives of North American Woodpeckers through four seasons including; courtship, mating, and nesting in spring; fledging and feeding of young in summer; dispersal and learning independence in fall; and, finally winter movements and survival. His exploration of these impactful birds and their habitats includes the species from the Arctic through southern Mexico, including those of the Caribbean Islands. Bannick’s startling images reflect their shared behaviors as well as some surprising exceptions and adaptations. More than just a backdrop, the varied habitats reveal wildly rich stories of their own.

Paul Bannick’s camera work is so revelatory that Woodpecker is like sight for the blind. Never has this keystone species been portrayed so intimately. His prose explains that the extraordinary hammering that seems like tree vandalism is actually the work of forest doctors, as vital as they are beautiful. A lovely, informative book.

—William Dietrich, author of The Final Forest

No other author/photographer has come close to creating a book like this. Bannick’s photos are breathtaking, his prose elegant, his knowledge of woodpeckers encyclopedic. If you love birds, read it. Then keep it handy because it has a second function as a field guide.

—Ted Williams, former editor of Audubon Magazine and award-winning wildlife writer

New Member New Member New Member New Member New Member New Member New Member New Member
New Member
from $20.00
Membership Level: