How to Be a Better Birder

Author:   Derek Lovitch
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
ISBN:  

9780691144481


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   25 March 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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How to Be a Better Birder


Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Derek Lovitch
Publisher:   Princeton University Press
Imprint:   Princeton University Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.369kg
ISBN:  

9780691144481


ISBN 10:   0691144486
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   25 March 2012
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  General ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.
Language:   English

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix Introduction 1 Chapter 1: Advanced Field Identification 5 Chapter 2: Birding by Habitat 31 Chapter 3: Birding with Geography 53 Chapter 4: Birding and Weather 75 Chapter : Birding at Night 101 Chapter 6: Birding with a Purpose 123 Chapter 7: Vagrants 134 Chapter 8: A New Jersey Case Study 155 Chapter 9: Patch Listing 172 References and Additional Reading 181 Index 187

Reviews

The goal of birding, of any hobby, is expertise gratia sua, and the only reason we do it is to do it better. This slender new volume by Derek Lovitch will help almost any birder do just that... Lovitch is at his very best in the book's central chapters, where he offers detailed instruction in reading weather forecasts for finding birds ... the skills we're taught in this book will make it even more fun--and make us all better birders. -- Rick Wright, American Birding Association This book will be most useful for intermediate level birders. The section on NEXRAD radar will be useful to all birders. -- Ian Paulsen, Birdbooker Report Birders of all backgrounds and skill levels are almost certain to learn something useful in Derek Lovitch's book How to Be a Better Birder. Can you become a better birder? This book offers a resounding 'yes' to that question. Refreshingly, this book is not filled with diagnostic plates and diagrams to study, but a 'whole bird and more' holistic approach to ID, and to the overall pastime of birding as well. As you will discover, the author offers a lot of ways on becoming a better birder that go beyond being able to correctly identify birds in the field. -- Mike McDowell, Digiscoper Blog How to Be a Better Birder is for birders who have moved from the beginner stages and want to hone their skills... If you can identify most birds in your neighbourhood and want to learn more so that you can really enjoy the fun of birding wherever you go, then Derek Lovitch's book will be a useful guide to hours of enjoyment in watching our wild birds. -- Rob Butler, Vancouver Sun Birders at any experience level will find something of interest in this slender volume. -- Penny Miller, A Charm of Finches Derek Lovitch has written a book which is useful for birders at any level of proficiency from the beginner to the obsessive lister. -- Dorothy Borders, Nature of Things [How to Be a Better Birder] is written in a chatty, enthusiastic and accessible style which works well. Lovitch is a great communicator and it is hard not to be enthused by the examples provided of how to generate your own 'great days in the field.' ... For those with a little less experience, this book provides a fabulous store of information and encouragement which will certainly make your birding more purposeful, productive and enjoyable. -- Andy Stoddart's blog Birdwatchers bent on self-improvement will want to turn to Derek Lovitch's How to Be a Better Birder... Writing in the accessible, breezy prose of a blog, Lovitch provides a rich compendium of tools, techniques, and resources useful to anyone who's mastered elementary bird watching. Among the tools discussed are botany, maps, meteorology, and NEXRAD; a list of print and web resources for further study is included in each discussion. The amount of information packed into this brief handbook is formidable. Interspersed among the technical details--and perhaps equally informative--are the author's personal stories of birding adventures and misadventures told with self-effacing humor. -- Fannie Peczenik, Pittsburgh Bird Watching Examiner How to Be a Better Birder is a very different kind of birding book, and, once you think about it, the perfect book to be written at this particular moment in the birding universe... Strategic has become an overused word in some areas, but that is really what Derek Lovitch is presenting in this slim volume, a way to maximize our time in the field, to see the most and the best birds possible using field experience and technology. Do you want to be a better birder, a strategic birder? I think there is something in this book that will help birders at every level. -- Donna Schulman, 10,000 Birds blog While there is no trick or fast-track to being a great birder, this book provides a lot of easy to follow and easy to practice methods to increase your birding skills and your enjoyment of birding... The tone and flow of the book allow you to gradually learn new methods to be a better birder. You're bound to find several nuggets of information that you can use today, tomorrow, and always in the search for more birds. -- Eddie Callaway, Birdfreak.com A birding book that should fly off the shelves... To become proficient at any activity, we all know the mantra: practice, practice, practice. Lovitch urges us to really study all the birds we see, including the most common birds around us. He also suggests that a more holistic approach to bird identification may be a more fruitful way to go about the process of identifying a bird. -- Herb Wilson, Portland Press Herald A new take on a well-rehearsed subject... It breaks new ground in its discussions of how, where and when to find vagrants, rarities and large numbers of migrating birds. -- Towheeblog Derek Lovitch uses his years of experience birding in Maine and around the world to describe the field skills of top-notch birders. He explains how to use habitat, geography, and weather to find more birds and to anticipate vagrants. And he argues that if we care about the future of birds, we must bird with a purpose, joining citizen-science projects and submitting sightings to eBird. -- Bird Watching Magazine This is an easy read that, even for a serious birder, can serve to shine a light on how old-fashioned field skills can be brought into play more quickly and more often through the use of technology, to determine where the birds are most likely to be found, when they're most likely to be there, and why. When that special life-list vagrant from across the country happens to show up, you'll know right away how to find it before the rest of the crowd. Even top-notch birders can sharpen their skills in an evening spent with this book. -- Birding Business Magazine Full of enthusiasm and some humor, this book stresses (more than most other birding titles) the importance of understanding weather and the possibilities of nighttime birding, especially when enhanced by easy-to-use radars. In this way, it is as successfully specific as it is well rounded. With engaging anecdotes and autobiographical experiences mixed in, this title achieves the perfect balance of detail and brevity. -- Henry Armistead, Library Journal


The goal of birding, of any hobby, is expertise gratia sua, and the only reason we do it is to do it better. This slender new volume by Derek Lovitch will help almost any birder do just that... Lovitch is at his very best in the book's central chapters, where he offers detailed instruction in reading weather forecasts for finding birds ... the skills we're taught in this book will make it even more fun--and make us all better birders. -- Rick Wright, American Birding Association This book will be most useful for intermediate level birders. The section on NEXRAD radar will be useful to all birders. -- Ian Paulsen, Birdbooker Report Birders of all backgrounds and skill levels are almost certain to learn something useful in Derek Lovitch's book How to Be a Better Birder. Can you become a better birder? This book offers a resounding 'yes' to that question. Refreshingly, this book is not filled with diagnostic plates and diagrams to study, but a 'whole bird and more' holistic approach to ID, and to the overall pastime of birding as well. As you will discover, the author offers a lot of ways on becoming a better birder that go beyond being able to correctly identify birds in the field. -- Mike McDowell, Digiscoper Blog How to Be a Better Birder is for birders who have moved from the beginner stages and want to hone their skills... If you can identify most birds in your neighbourhood and want to learn more so that you can really enjoy the fun of birding wherever you go, then Derek Lovitch's book will be a useful guide to hours of enjoyment in watching our wild birds. -- Rob Butler, Vancouver Sun Birders at any experience level will find something of interest in this slender volume. -- Penny Miller, A Charm of Finches Derek Lovitch has written a book which is useful for birders at any level of proficiency from the beginner to the obsessive lister. -- Dorothy Borders, Nature of Things [How to Be a Better Birder] is written in a chatty, enthusiastic and accessible style which works well. Lovitch is a great communicator and it is hard not to be enthused by the examples provided of how to generate your own 'great days in the field.' ... For those with a little less experience, this book provides a fabulous store of information and encouragement which will certainly make your birding more purposeful, productive and enjoyable. -- Andy Stoddart's blog Birdwatchers bent on self-improvement will want to turn to Derek Lovitch's How to Be a Better Birder... Writing in the accessible, breezy prose of a blog, Lovitch provides a rich compendium of tools, techniques, and resources useful to anyone who's mastered elementary bird watching. Among the tools discussed are botany, maps, meteorology, and NEXRAD; a list of print and web resources for further study is included in each discussion. The amount of information packed into this brief handbook is formidable. Interspersed among the technical details--and perhaps equally informative--are the author's personal stories of birding adventures and misadventures told with self-effacing humor. -- Fannie Peczenik, Pittsburgh Bird Watching Examiner How to Be a Better Birder is a very different kind of birding book, and, once you think about it, the perfect book to be written at this particular moment in the birding universe... Strategic has become an overused word in some areas, but that is really what Derek Lovitch is presenting in this slim volume, a way to maximize our time in the field, to see the most and the best birds possible using field experience and technology. Do you want to be a better birder, a strategic birder? I think there is something in this book that will help birders at every level. -- Donna Schulman, 10,000 Birds blog While there is no trick or fast-track to being a great birder, this book provides a lot of easy to follow and easy to practice methods to increase your birding skills and your enjoyment of birding... The tone and flow of the book allow you to gradually learn new methods to be a better birder. You're bound to find several nuggets of information that you can use today, tomorrow, and always in the search for more birds. -- Eddie Callaway, Birdfreak.com A birding book that should fly off the shelves... To become proficient at any activity, we all know the mantra: practice, practice, practice. Lovitch urges us to really study all the birds we see, including the most common birds around us. He also suggests that a more holistic approach to bird identification may be a more fruitful way to go about the process of identifying a bird. -- Herb Wilson, Portland Press Herald A new take on a well-rehearsed subject... It breaks new ground in its discussions of how, where and when to find vagrants, rarities and large numbers of migrating birds. -- Towheeblog Derek Lovitch uses his years of experience birding in Maine and around the world to describe the field skills of top-notch birders. He explains how to use habitat, geography, and weather to find more birds and to anticipate vagrants. And he argues that if we care about the future of birds, we must bird with a purpose, joining citizen-science projects and submitting sightings to eBird. -- Bird Watching Magazine This is an easy read that, even for a serious birder, can serve to shine a light on how old-fashioned field skills can be brought into play more quickly and more often through the use of technology, to determine where the birds are most likely to be found, when they're most likely to be there, and why. When that special life-list vagrant from across the country happens to show up, you'll know right away how to find it before the rest of the crowd. Even top-notch birders can sharpen their skills in an evening spent with this book. -- Birding Business Magazine


The goal of birding, of any hobby, is expertise gratia sua, and the only reason we do it is to do it better. This slender new volume by Derek Lovitch will help almost any birder do just that... Lovitch is at his very best in the book's central chapters, where he offers detailed instruction in reading weather forecasts for finding birds ... the skills we're taught in this book will make it even more fun--and make us all better birders. -- Rick Wright, American Birding Association This book will be most useful for intermediate level birders. The section on NEXRAD radar will be useful to all birders. -- Ian Paulsen, Birdbooker Report Birders of all backgrounds and skill levels are almost certain to learn something useful in Derek Lovitch's book How to Be a Better Birder. Can you become a better birder? This book offers a resounding 'yes' to that question. Refreshingly, this book is not filled with diagnostic plates and diagrams to study, but a 'whole bird and more' holistic approach to ID, and to the overall pastime of birding as well. As you will discover, the author offers a lot of ways on becoming a better birder that go beyond being able to correctly identify birds in the field. -- Mike McDowell, Digiscoper Blog How to Be a Better Birder is for birders who have moved from the beginner stages and want to hone their skills... If you can identify most birds in your neighbourhood and want to learn more so that you can really enjoy the fun of birding wherever you go, then Derek Lovitch's book will be a useful guide to hours of enjoyment in watching our wild birds. -- Rob Butler, Vancouver Sun Birders at any experience level will find something of interest in this slender volume. -- Penny Miller, A Charm of Finches Derek Lovitch has written a book which is useful for birders at any level of proficiency from the beginner to the obsessive lister. -- Dorothy Borders, Nature of Things [How to Be a Better Birder] is written in a chatty, enthusiastic and accessible style which works well. Lovitch is a great communicator and it is hard not to be enthused by the examples provided of how to generate your own 'great days in the field.' ... For those with a little less experience, this book provides a fabulous store of information and encouragement which will certainly make your birding more purposeful, productive and enjoyable. -- Andy Stoddart's blog Birdwatchers bent on self-improvement will want to turn to Derek Lovitch's How to Be a Better Birder... Writing in the accessible, breezy prose of a blog, Lovitch provides a rich compendium of tools, techniques, and resources useful to anyone who's mastered elementary bird watching. Among the tools discussed are botany, maps, meteorology, and NEXRAD; a list of print and web resources for further study is included in each discussion. The amount of information packed into this brief handbook is formidable. Interspersed among the technical details--and perhaps equally informative--are the author's personal stories of birding adventures and misadventures told with self-effacing humor. -- Fannie Peczenik, Pittsburgh Bird Watching Examiner How to Be a Better Birder is a very different kind of birding book, and, once you think about it, the perfect book to be written at this particular moment in the birding universe... Strategic has become an overused word in some areas, but that is really what Derek Lovitch is presenting in this slim volume, a way to maximize our time in the field, to see the most and the best birds possible using field experience and technology. Do you want to be a better birder, a strategic birder? I think there is something in this book that will help birders at every level. -- Donna Schulman, 10,000 Birds blog While there is no trick or fast-track to being a great birder, this book provides a lot of easy to follow and easy to practice methods to increase your birding skills and your enjoyment of birding... The tone and flow of the book allow you to gradually learn new methods to be a better birder. You're bound to find several nuggets of information that you can use today, tomorrow, and always in the search for more birds. -- Eddie Callaway, Birdfreak.com A birding book that should fly off the shelves... To become proficient at any activity, we all know the mantra: practice, practice, practice. Lovitch urges us to really study all the birds we see, including the most common birds around us. He also suggests that a more holistic approach to bird identification may be a more fruitful way to go about the process of identifying a bird. -- Herb Wilson, Portland Press Herald A new take on a well-rehearsed subject... It breaks new ground in its discussions of how, where and when to find vagrants, rarities and large numbers of migrating birds. -- Towheeblog


Author Information

Derek Lovitch has worked on avian research and education projects throughout the United States, has written numerous articles for birding publications, and was a columnist for Birding magazine. He now owns and runs Freeport Wild Bird Supply in Maine.

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