These field notes are especially good for bird-watchers but any naturalist or ecologist will be fascinated. If you just enjoy spending time outdoors, you need to read the book too. The author is a teaching professor who spent some months driving to field stations in America to observe nature and observe the observers, delivering a few lectures to the students and learning just as much from them.
On an island ecology base, the author walked around noting the plants which were invasive, the effects of removing one raptor and replacing it with another species which took differing prey, wondered where the butterflies were and counted the foxes he saw.
At Hawk Hill, passed over by migrant as well as resident raptors, the author put in day after day, session after session of focused teamwork, identifying hundreds of raptors in a morning.
Up a forested mountain, the author climbed and hiked, accompanied by younger students who blithely toted heavy equipment for observation posts and roped themselves down cliffs.
On a grassy hill the author counted woodpeckers storing acorns in individually made holes in a tree known as a granary tree - see it on YouTube.
The author, rubbing his sore knees and trudging through snow to retrieve his car before the snow ploughs arrive, fending off sunburn, wishing he'd brought his camera, and making his own meals, laughs at himself and makes friends with everyone he meets. He tells us that it may be time to hand over the torch to the students. Where all the older naturalists he meets are men, I noticed the students seem to be equally male and female. And their work is seriously impressive. The writing flows smoothly and we feel the humour and love for nature rippling off the pages.
Read it, love it.
I read an e-ARC from Net Galley and Fresh Fiction. This is an unbiased review.