An acknowledged classic of narrative nature-writing, Donald Watson's
The Hen Harrier was the culmination of a lifetime's study of this
beautiful upland bird. A gentle, warm and wonderfully written book,
The Hen Harrier stems from an age of 'amateur' conservation, from the
pen of a man who cared deeply about birds and their habitats,
especially of the Scottish borders where he conducted much of his
research and painting. The book was among the last of a dying breed;
it would be thirty years or more before writing on our natural history
would again reach the heights of accessibility to nature-lovers
exemplified by Donald Watson and his peers. The book starts with
Watson setting down more or less everything known about harriers –
which at that time often consisted of information sent by letter to
the author, rather than published in a journal – before moving on to
the story of Watson's years studying nests in the south-west of
Scotland. With a foreword by conservation champion Mark Avery, this
edition of Watson's greatest work is particularly timely. The conflict
between grouse-shooting interests, which has overseen the virtual
extinction of the harrier as a breeding bird in England through
illegal persecution, and an increasingly vocal conservationist lobby
is the number one conservation issue in Britain today. Donald Watson's
narrative soars like a sky-dancing harrier throughout this book. Read
it, and be taken back to a simpler age of nature conservation by a
true master of the art.
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781472946126
Publisert
2020
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Bloomsbury Natural History
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter