Red-Breasted Nuthatch – Bird Art Print on Wood

Red-Breasted Nuthatch – Bird Art Print on Wood

This product is currently out of stock and unavailable.

About the Bird Art:

The image is printed on Epson Premium Matte Paper with UltraChrome Ink; the color should last quite a long time. The print is then mounted on a cradled wood block and coated with a UV resistant protectant to prevent fading. Each block is signed and numbered on the back (the edition # you receive will vary). Ready to hang from a sawtooth hanger attached to the back. Watermarks will not appear on print. Color may vary (based on your monitor settings).

To get three bird prints at a discounted price, visit this link.

See more below.

Additional information

Bird Art

4" x 4": $48, 6" x 6": $55

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This listing is for a limited edition, fine art print of my original painting of a Red-Breasted Nuthatch called, “I Remember the Glow.”

This pretty little girl is nimble as can be. She’s currently basking the afternoon sun, happily hanging off the side of a tall tree.

Bird in a Box subscribers: this is the bird for May 2017.

A glimpse into the process...

About the Bird

From our Friends at Audubon:

With its quiet calls and dense coniferous forest habitat, this nuthatch may be overlooked until it wanders down a tree toward the ground. It often shows little fear of humans, and may come very close to a person standing quietly in a conifer grove. Red-breasted Nuthatches nest farther north and higher in the mountains than their relatives; when winter food crops fail in these boreal forests, they may migrate hundreds of miles to the south.

Conservation status Numbers probably stable. Has expanded breeding range southward in some eastern states by nesting in plantings of ornamental conifers.
Family Nuthatches
Habitat Conifer forests; in winter, also other trees. Nesting habitat almost always has many conifers, such as spruce, fir, hemlock, either in pure stands or mixed with deciduous trees. Mature forest preferred, perhaps because old decaying wood needed for nest sites. In migration and winter may appear in any wooded habitat, but conifers always chosen if available.

Mostly found in forests in Northern California and the Rockies, up through Canada.