Description

Book Synopsis

‘I remember well my first Bewick’s swans, which I bumped into one November day not far from home. They looked at me, unsure whether or not to fly into the fog, as I tried to get as close as I dared. … What is it, exactly, that can, many years later, recall such emotionally charged birding moments so vividly to mind? I can’t really remember my birthdays at all, but my first green woodpecker and my first jay are firmly embedded. And with some of these things, the place it happened is equally important.’

With its mix of memoir, gentle advice and enthusiastic advocacy, this book sets out a case for purposeful birdwatching. Along the way, it explains how to make your birding more enjoyable, fulfilling and worthwhile. Using ideas and techniques from his five decades of experience, Rob Hume reveals how an ever-enquiring approach to observation of the natural world can yield unexpected treasures – whether this be something rare or simply new details concealed in the apparently everyday. From the basics of equipment and methods, through the mysteries of seawatching, to special insights on the likes of honey-buzzards and goshawks, and a focus on some iconic sites, his breadth of knowledge ensures there is something for every curious birder.

Illuminatingly illustrated throughout with the author’s sketches and fieldnotes, at its heart this is a call to appreciate birds for themselves, as individuals and as species, and not merely as numbers on a list. It will help lead beginners towards a practical and more satisfying hobby, while also being of great interest to experienced birders who will relate to the content through their own experiences.



Trade Review

This is a lovely book... If all those who look through binoculars were as thoughtful as this author, and wrote as well, the world, and the world of birding, would be a better place. A very good read.

-- Mark Avery, author and environmental campaigner

Table of Contents

Preface
What is birdwatching, anyway?
What to do with your interest in birds
Buy a good book
Get a notebook and pen
Distribution, habitats and time of year
Colour and light
Early days
More good days, bad days, ordinary days
Waxwings
Some dusk encounters
Soaring birds and birds of prey
Local patches
Wonderful Wales – Croeso i Gymru
Superlative Scotland
Great shrikes
If at first…

Purposeful Birdwatching: Getting to Know Birds

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    £24.98

    Includes FREE delivery

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Rob Hume

    1 in stock

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Purposeful Birdwatching: Getting to Know Birds by Rob Hume

      Publisher: Pelagic Publishing
      Publication Date: 06/02/2024
      ISBN13: 9781784274689, 978-1784274689
      ISBN10: 1784274682

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      ‘I remember well my first Bewick’s swans, which I bumped into one November day not far from home. They looked at me, unsure whether or not to fly into the fog, as I tried to get as close as I dared. … What is it, exactly, that can, many years later, recall such emotionally charged birding moments so vividly to mind? I can’t really remember my birthdays at all, but my first green woodpecker and my first jay are firmly embedded. And with some of these things, the place it happened is equally important.’

      With its mix of memoir, gentle advice and enthusiastic advocacy, this book sets out a case for purposeful birdwatching. Along the way, it explains how to make your birding more enjoyable, fulfilling and worthwhile. Using ideas and techniques from his five decades of experience, Rob Hume reveals how an ever-enquiring approach to observation of the natural world can yield unexpected treasures – whether this be something rare or simply new details concealed in the apparently everyday. From the basics of equipment and methods, through the mysteries of seawatching, to special insights on the likes of honey-buzzards and goshawks, and a focus on some iconic sites, his breadth of knowledge ensures there is something for every curious birder.

      Illuminatingly illustrated throughout with the author’s sketches and fieldnotes, at its heart this is a call to appreciate birds for themselves, as individuals and as species, and not merely as numbers on a list. It will help lead beginners towards a practical and more satisfying hobby, while also being of great interest to experienced birders who will relate to the content through their own experiences.



      Trade Review

      This is a lovely book... If all those who look through binoculars were as thoughtful as this author, and wrote as well, the world, and the world of birding, would be a better place. A very good read.

      -- Mark Avery, author and environmental campaigner

      Table of Contents

      Preface
      What is birdwatching, anyway?
      What to do with your interest in birds
      Buy a good book
      Get a notebook and pen
      Distribution, habitats and time of year
      Colour and light
      Early days
      More good days, bad days, ordinary days
      Waxwings
      Some dusk encounters
      Soaring birds and birds of prey
      Local patches
      Wonderful Wales – Croeso i Gymru
      Superlative Scotland
      Great shrikes
      If at first…

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