

Get it, read it." thinks like a biologist but writes like a poet." - Wall Street JournalĪn entertaining and profound look at the lives of birds, illuminating their surprising world-and deep connection with humanity.īirds are highly intelligent animals, yet their intelligence is dramatically different from our own and has been little understood. What is here and why? What was here? Things like migration, time of year, range, and the rest feel like a secret language I’m just beginning to learn. I know it seems a bit dorky, and yes, most people could care less, but there is something about paying attention. I for one feel fortunate to have found birding. In the infamous words of my mother who was teaching me to hunt “If it flies, it dies.” (I’m not recommending the shotgun part, and I haven’t hunted birds in thirty years.) Simple observation, list building, eBird participation, bird count participation, sketching birds, or maybe even ponying up for a shotgun and blasting them from the sky.

Bird species are dropping at alarming rates, so if you have an interest in our feathered friends now is the time to get involved, whatever that means to you. There is far too much evidence to sway me to think otherwise. The truth is, humans are destroying the planet and everything on it. Rufous who took offense at any slight to his/her territory. Wearing red was a guaranteed visit from Mr.

I found the chapter on hummingbirds to be especially poignant as my life in Wyoming was fraught with epic aerial battles that would force us off our front porch. These species are forcing humans to rethink learning and are also shining a light on birds in ways not seen before. From pigeons and their incredible homing ability to the surreal artistry of the bowerbird to the astonishing life of the albatross. The Thing With Feathers covers a range of species and what makes those individual birds so unique. I find his writing to be entirely consumable and his knowledge of birds is, of course, beyond what most of us will ever know. In fact, he once set the single-year “Big Year” record and documented the experience in Birding Without Borders. Strycker is one of the most recognized birders in the world. You might remember my post about Noah Strycker from earlier this year.
