A Birder's Guide to Vancouver and the Lower Mainland
by Vancouver Natural History Society ISBN: 1552852075
Post Your Opinion | | A Review of: The BirderĘs Guide to Vancouver and the Lower Mainland by Allan SafarikThe Birder's Guide To Vancouver And The Lower Mainland, is a practical
guide to the birds of this region. Well designed and beautifully
produced, this guide book covers the over 400 species of birds that
can be found in the Vancouver area, one of the most remarkable bird
locations on the continent. The Fraser River estuary area is an
important part of the Pacific Flyway. "Millions of shorebirds
and waterfowl pass through here on their migratory routes between
Siberia, Alaska and northern Canada, and California, Central America
and South America. The region is also an important wintering area
for raptors." This book is about the place where I was born
and raised: east-end Vancouver, the bush lands of North Burnaby,
the coastline of Burrard Inlet (especially at New Brighton), the
Iron workers Memorial Bridge at Second Narrows, the North Vancouver
fore shore, Seymour Creek, Stanley Park, English Bay, Spanish Banks
as well as the sloughs and marshes and fore shores of Ladner,
Boundary Bay, Burns Bog, Pitt Meadows, and the Fraser Valley where
my father took us on his weekly rambles over the country, fishing
or picking blue berries or hazel nuts, or crabbing or checking the
crayfish traps in his string in one of the rivers (the Nicomekl,
the Serpentine, the Alouette) that ambled through the Fraser Valley.
We were always looking at, or pointing out birds and thinking about
them since they were everywhere around us in their great variety
and numbers.
The Birder's Guide to Vancouver and the Lower Mainland, written and
photographed by a cast of over fifty contributors has been put
together in a format that does justice to its purpose of guiding
birders through a virtual bird paradise, a temperate Pacific climate
in an urban region of two million human inhabitants. This book's
fifty contributors have done an excellent job providing in-depth
information accompanied by local maps that contain excellent
information on how to access a myriad of sites in the region by car
from downtown Vancouver or by public transit. This is a wonderful
book full of detailed lore about the important bird areas in the
region and the birds that reside there and it offers a plethora of
coloured photographs.
One of the most delightful chapters in this volume is the
self-explanatory Chapter 31, "Birding from BC Ferries".
This is a book for local and visiting folk. The compilers of The
Birds Of Vancouver And The Lower Mainland have considered every
angle, producing the best guide book on birding in a region with
which I'm well familiar.
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