
One Wild Bird at a Time
Portraits of Individual Lives
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Narrado por:
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Rick Adamson
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De:
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Bernd Heinrich
In One Wild Bird at a Time, Heinrich returns to his great love: close, day-to-day observations of individual wild birds. Heinrich's observations lead to fascinating questions - and sometimes startling discoveries. A great crested flycatcher bringing food to the young acts surreptitiously and is attacked by the mate. Why? A pair of northern flickers hammering their nest-hole into the side of Heinrich's cabin delivers the opportunity to observe the feeding competition between siblings and to make a related discovery about nest cleaning. One of a clutch of redstart warbler babies fledges out of the nest from 20 feet above the ground and lands on the grass below. It can't fly. What will happen next?
©2016 Bernd Heinrich (P)2016 Dreamscape Media, LLCListeners also enjoyed...




















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It all makes for a mini vacation you can pick up anytime.
Great introduction
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worth it for the bird calls
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For Nature Lovers
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Bird love
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The guy actually takes a chainsaw to his inside wall to help some birds nest in his house!!
Looking at Birds differently
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Would you consider the audio edition of One Wild Bird at a Time to be better than the print version?
Yes, I thought Mr. Adamson did well to give the topic more life than I would have expected. There were parts where the author tended to get bogged down, and he seemed to keep it moving.What was one of the most memorable moments of One Wild Bird at a Time?
The patience Bernd Heinrich has. He would pose a problem, a possible answer, and then spend so much time and effort. Nevertheless, it held my interest and hated to see it endWas this a book you wanted to listen to all in one sitting?
No, each chapter stands on its own. Thus it is not a book that needs to be read at one time to be enjoyedSurprised me how much I enjoyed
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polls, grosbeaks and others. I am so pleased with and appreciative of this book.
Delightful
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Over all a very interesting observational study on some birds. Something very pleasant to fall asleep to. It definitely makes me want to visit the east coast.
I Love this So Much
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Disappointingly, I didn't learn anything. At least not what I hoped to learn. I did not want to know about ants in a feed ball, autopsies of murdered crows, the contents of a chickadee's belly, mole skulls are in owl scat, or abandoned nests infested with maggots. This short book is long on gratuitous details, yet we rarely get the background about how birds developed into our interesting and surprisingly intelligent feathered friends.
I would've loved to learn about the hummingbirds I sometimes see. Instead the author waxes rhapsodic about smart and friendly crows, oblivious to the common experience of crows as nasty, noisy, belligerent birds who leave an awful mess. He wastes a chapter trying to figure out why Blue Jays squawk, when the obvious answer is to drive us nuts. And I don't need a scientist to tell me that when one chickadee acts like he found food, others will soon follow.
In addition to the hummingbird, I wanted to know how wild turkeys got to be so common after coming so close to extinction, why Carl the Cardinal thinks my neighbor's home is really his, what would bring a great blue heron so far out of its range to the shores of a cold northern lake, and why ducks make such pleasant neighbors while geese are such a nuisance. This is what I've observed, but these birds don't make the cut. No robins, so ubiquitous in my neck of the woods that they nest over my door.
I'm not a science guy, but most of the science books I've listened to have been fascinating, illuminating, even entertaining. This one was dull and repetitive, out of touch with what interests non-scientists (hint: it's not scat, feed balls, skinned birds, or maggot-ridden nests), and not even comprehensive enough to cover some of the bird types we see most often, or some of the elusive species that capture our imagination.
Not Entertaining or Educational Enough
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a fascinating book
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