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Good Birders Don't Wear White: 50 Tips From North America's Top Birders - Softcover

 
9780618756421: Good Birders Don't Wear White: 50 Tips From North America's Top Birders
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In these 50 light and fun original essays, the biggest names in birding dispense advice to birders of every level, on topics ranging from feeding birds and cleaning binoculars to pishing and pelagic birding. Whether satirizing bird snobs or relating the traditions and taboos of the birding culture, each essay is as chock-full of helpful information as it is entertaining.

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About the Author:
LISA A. WHITE is executive editor of nature and field guides at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in Boston, Massachusetts.
 

PETE DUNNE forged a bond with nature as a child and has been studying hawks for more than forty years. He has written fifteen books and countless magazine and newspaper columns. He was the founding director of the Cape May Bird Observatory and now serves as New Jersey Audubon’s Birding Ambassador. He lives in Mauricetown, New Jersey.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
FOREWORD I find myself in a very uncomfortable position here and I don’t mean facing a computer screen with fingers dancing over the keyboard. Fact is, I write a lot books, articles, columns, you name it. If the topic relates directly or tacitly to birds, chances are I’ve dabbled in it. No, my discomfort has nothing to do with any unfamiliarity. It has to do with direction.
Almost always, when I sit down to write, I know precisely what I’m going to say and pretty much how I’m going to say it. This time I’m at a loss. I know what I’m supposed to do, and that is warm up readers for the great act to follow. But that is also the problem. How can any one writer hope to introduce a birding audience to the greatest compilation of birding know-how of all time?
Okay, let’s start with what this foreword is not going to do. It is not going to beguile you with the hints, tricks, shortcuts, and advice that expert birders bring to bear. That is what the fifty contributors to this book have done: synthesize more than a hundred years of birding tradition and approximately twenty-five hundred cumulative years of birding experience.
Who’s going to try to compete with that?
This foreword is also not going to fall back on the old tried-and- true distraction employed by many writers in my position, which is to expound on my own experiences with birds, birding, and bird study.
Look. I’ve written whole books filled with anecdotal bird stuff like that. You passed them by in order to buy this one (and I can’t gainsay your choice).
But in searching for an angle, I do find that I have an insider’s insight that may pique a reader’s interest. It turns out that I know virtually all of the contributors to these pages, recognizing all as colleagues and knowing many as friends. Many writers have an aversion to speaking about themselves, so with the authority vested in me, I think it might be fun to offer readers a peek behind the writer’s mask and direct a descriptive word or two toward the contributing authors of Good Birders Don’t Wear White.
Jon Dunn is a noted author and tour leader for WINGS and has been for many years the final word when it comes to tricky identifications. All photos of unidentified gulls and Empidonax flycatchers with borderline traits ultimately find their way into Jon’s hands. Jon is affable and serious, intellectually gifted, and boasts an array of interests (we share a passion for American history). Tens of thousands of birders are better birders because of Jon and his teaching skill. If you are not counted among them, you soon will be.
Jessie Barry, at the tender age of thirteen, was a poster child for the American Birding Association. She and I appeared together in their membership brochure. The photo showed me pointing out a bird, Jessie looking on. I’ve always wanted to know what happened to the other hundred photos taken that day the ones that showed Jessie pointing out birds to me. As memory serves, they were more representative of our day. Now that she is at the University of Washington, working on a degree in ecology and evolutionary biology and in her spare time on a field guide to North American waterfowl, Jessie’s signature expression is Uhmmmm.” When she starts humming this mantra, it means her binoculars are fused to something really good andyoubettergetonitFAST.
The last time I heard it, she was looking at a Summer Tanager from the porch of the person who claims the largest yard list in North America. The bird proved to be number 307 for Paul Lehman, a Cape May resident celebrated for his knowledge of bird distribution. Open almost any field guide. If Paul didn’t actually draft the range maps, he was almost certainly consulted. His hobby is finding new bird species for North America. His happy hunting ground is the Inuit village of Gambel on St. Lawrence Island. I don’t know whether Paul has actually been adopted by the tribe, but he is on the tribal leader’s e-mail birthday greeting list.
Paul’s yard list total now? Just hit 314. Magnificent Frigatebird. As fortune had it, he was away from home last week, when the Gray Kingbird perched on the utility lines just down the street from his porch. Yep, you guessed it, Paul was on Gambel.
When it comes to just plain enjoying birds, few can stand on the same platform with Victor Emanuel, founder and director of Victor Emanuel Nature Tours. Victor’s signature expression is Wow.” Search the world over, and you’ll find nothing that beats Wow.” But what distinguishes Victor is not so much the expression as the lavishness with which it is applied. Victor says Wow” about almost any bird. A White-eyed Vireo in full view garners a Wow.” A Northern Cardinal in sunlight earns a Wow.” A Painted Redstart, dancing through the oaks in Cave Creek Canyon (where Victor and I used to co-lead his youth birding camps) is alwaysssss sanctified with a Wow.” Often several.
And you know, no matter how many vireos or cardinals you’ve seen (and I’ve seen hundreds), when Victor says Wow,” by golly, you get that sense of wow, too. Wow is infectious. Victor the vector.
I can’t begin to express how delighted I was to see John Kricher’s name ranked among the authors. I met John, a college professor and ecologist, in the summer of 1977. He was teaching a marsh ecology course; I was struggling to give standing and solvency to an institution called the Cape May Bird Observatory.
Not long ago I was working on a book project that involved reading virtually all of the 716 volumes that constitute The Birds of North America. This comprehensive ornithological work was designed to impart the sum of knowledge relating to North American birds and, as such, was never intended to make for light reading. But the intent didn’t necessarily preclude this possibility, and while reading the account for Black-and-white Warbler, I was surprised by the entertaining and readable quality of the piece. I turned to the cover to see who the author was, and you guessed it John’s name was there. Scientist and wordsmith two great but by no means singular qualities.
This book will introduce you to other contributors who are both able scientists and capable communicators Paul Kerlinger, author and bird migration expert who did his seminal work on migrating raptors by using an old police radar in Cape May, and David Bird, McGill University professor and radio show host.
It’s a slippery slope I’ve placed myself on, realizing now that by singling out just some of the wonderful and talented contributors to this book, I will inevitably fail to do justice to them all.
It would be unthinkable not to draw the reader’s attention to Bill Thompson III, editor of Bird Watcher’s Digest and author of Bird Watching for Dummies; Amy Hooper, editor of WildBird; and Chuck Hagner, editor in chief of Birder’s World. The talent they bring to their respective magazines is reflected here, too.
Popular bird magazines are as visually arresting as the birds that are their subject. So in these pages you’ll find contributions from celebrated photographers such as Richard Crossley and Kevin Karlson (coauthors of the new shorebird guide), Arthur Morris and Tim Gallagher.
Tim Gallagher . . . Tim Gallagher . . . now where (you are thinking) have I heard that name before?
Well, if you subscribe to Living Bird, you may recognize him as the magazine’s editor in chief. But unless you’ve been living in a cave in Tibet, I’ll bet you heard his name associated with the rediscovery of the Ivory- billed Woodpecker.
Oh, that Tim Gallagher. Precisely.
The slate of writers is just as stellar as the cast of photographers and includes well-known names such as Don and Lillian Stokes (birding’s First Couple”), Scott Shalaway (Mr. Backyard Birder himself), the incomparable (and unsinkable) Judith Toups and, of course, Scott Weidensaul.
You know, Scott, Roger Peterson once said that if he could paint like anyone else, it would be Robert Bateman. I just want to go on record saying that if I could write like anyone else, it would be Scott Weidensaul.
And readers are probably thinking, Well, if he’s less verbose than you are, Dunne, I wish you wrote like Scott, too.
You’re right. I’m running out of space. You’re running out of patience. The only things I’m not running out of are talented personalities to commend to you.
Scott, you’re a writer. How do I get out of the jam I’m in? Time for a deus ex machina? My deus, I almost forgot to mention Kenn Kaufman and David Sibley, whose celebrated names grace the spines of two of the dog- eared field guides you most certainly own. And Peter Alden (a guy who was leading bird tours for Massachusetts Audubon to places such as Africa back when birders considered a trip to the Everglades foreign travel) and Wayne Petersen (who leads them now). And Peter Stangel and Paul Baicich, two of the conservation cornerstones of birding. And Louise Zemaitis and Julie Zickefoose. Louise and Julie have a great deal in common. In addition to being wonderful people (and having last names that begin with Z), both are superlative artists.
From not knowing where to go with this foreword, I find that I have written myself into a real corner. Hit my word limit and still have a lot of names to flag. When writers get in a jam like this, they inevitably turn to their editors, and this foreword has finally inclined to her. Lisa White, a wonderful person and a credit to her profession. No one else in North America could have engaged the talents of the many experts housed in this book.
Kudos to you, Lisa. Hats off to them.
You’re curious about the title of the book? Ah, well, now you strike close to the heart of the matter (and very close to my own heart as well). The title comes from one of the essays found here an essay written by Sheri Williamson of Southeastern Arizona Bird Observatory (and author of the Peterson Field Guide to Hummingbirds of North America). This essay was first published in my book Pete Dunne on Bird Watching. It garnered Lisa White’s attention and triggered this book.
And so now, finally, you come to know how it came to be that out of all these talented and well-known birding personalities, I was the one chosen to write the foreword.
Professional courtesy. Right of first refusal. Had the essay first. But what really counts is who has it last.
That is you. So start turning pages and savoring the wit and wisdom of Good Birders Don’t Wear White.

Pete Dunne Vice President, Natural History Information New Jersey Audubon Society’s Cape May Bird Observatory

Copyright © 2007 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Illustrations copyright © 2007 by Robert A. Braunfield. Foreword copyright © 2007 by Pete Dunne. Reprinted by permission of Houghton Mifflin Company.

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  • PublisherHoughton Mifflin Harcourt
  • Publication date2007
  • ISBN 10 0618756426
  • ISBN 13 9780618756421
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages288
  • Rating

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