"If Thoreau's Concord neighbors led lives of quiet desperation, many people today rush through lives of frantic, noisy alienation. Paul Rezendes's book is about tracking, but also much more; it shows how to find your way home to the great web of life. For the woods walker, this book offers the key to a new kingdom." — The Boston Globe In this newly revised and updated edition of his highly acclaimed field guide, renowned nature photographer and tracking expert Paul Rezendes brings the fields and forests to life with his unique observations on North American wildlife and their tracks and sign. Illustrated with hundreds of his original photographs, Tracking & the Art of Seeing provides complete information on the behavior and habitat of over 50 animal species and shows you how to identify animals by their tracks, tail patterns, droppings, dens, scratches and other signs.
I am not a tracker nor an outdoorsmen - my interests in the subject matter were initially more curiosity-based: I always wondered how anyone tracks anything anywhere. The answers were fairly similar animal to animal: footprints (in soft substrates), scratch/dig marks and remains (food, feces), but more important than the actual tracking expertise this book offers, and it appears to offer a lot, is its eye-opening effect - after reading this book I became more aware of my surroundings, both in the woods I occasionally hike through and in the city I live in. If you are interested in animals, tracking or just like the nature channels this is a worthwhile buy.
This book is not limited to the interpretation of animal tracks and how to identify other signs, like rubs, digs, dens, scat, and evidence of feeding. The author also gives interesting descriptions and the history of the animals. So, it’s not just a field guide, but a book on animal characteristics, behaviors, ecology, and other tidbits. For example, who knew that the pope declared the beaver to be a fish because of its scaley tail, thereby allowing trappers to dine on beaver while still observing the Catholic prohibition against eating meat on Fridays? This book is an ethnography of sorts. Tracking isn’t just the art of seeing and reading signs, it’s the art of developing our attention and becoming connected to the natural world.
Tracking & the Art of Seeing is a divinely helpful book. If you want to see more of the world around you, particularly the wildlife around you, then this is the book for you. Prepare to be inspired.
I've read other books about tracking, but this one immediately transformed my experience -- I can't wait to read and study this book again. Far more than mere tracks, Paul Rezendes explores trail patterns, various middens, and many other signs. An absolute treasure.
(Of course, some of the habitat information is a bit outdated now, but that's an easy adjustment for most readers.)
An excellent educational/reference book (and a bit philosophical) for those who spend time outdoors studying the denizens of the forest. This will book will open your eyes to what was in front of you the entire time. Highly recommended.
This is a truly magnificent book on tracking. The author definitely knows his stuff. The photography is excellent, and both the text and the photographs do a great job of describing and displaying tracks, scat and other sign that individual animals leave in the woods, from the smallest rodents to the largest quadrupeds. There is no nonsense about tracking ants across granite or pseudo-spiritual tomfoolery. This is a book not just for those who want to learn to track, but for those who simply want to understand the natural world around them better and to have a greater enjoyment of wilderness experiences. As a tracking guide it ranks a 5 out of 5.
Replete with photographs of the many indicators of animal presence, this is more than just an identification guide. the author/photographer, paul rezendes, gives us a glimpse into the life of each species. reading his book s a process, not a result, designed to "tap the wild" in each of us in order to bridge the gap between ourselves and nature, read it through once as an engaging nature narrative, then use it as a reference. go back and peruse the areas of greatest interest, take it with you on nature walks and begin to see as you never have before.
Good so far. Nice pictures, very informative, has pictures of tracks in all surfaces including sand, dirt, mud and snow. Personal stories aren't as interesting as Tom Brown's but still fun to read.