Description

Book Synopsis
Foreword by Chris Packham. The author recounts his own experiences - the highs and the lows, the trials and tribulations - of being an avid birder in a world seemingly populated by experts and high-flyers. Join him on an often humorous and irreverent journey around the UK.

Trade Review
...From the rivalry between the author and his brother as children and their adventures, to his rediscovery of nature in all its glory, especially the winged kind, was the journey of a man with a passion that is detailed beautifully in this volume. The author writes with ease and imagination and his prose is a joy to read. The fact that he documents visits to some of my favourite wildlife watching spots made it even more entertaining but above all his love of nature shines through. This tale is accompanied by a parallel story of romance as he manages to find a like minded soul mate. A very enjoyable read. --Jenny Steel, www.wildlife-gardening.co.uk There is no birder out there who never gets it wrong, although there are a great many who would have you believe otherwise so it is refreshing to tag along with an average birder who can demonstrate that the richness and beauty of birding is all about the experience not the theory. Nice one Andrew. --Fatbirder Feb. 2012 The latest in a fairly long line of birding and twitching books, this tells the story of Andrew's journey into birdwatching as a boy. Early trips with his brother to the marshes in Essex and Kent will ring bells with many of us who followed similar paths of birding. There are many accounts of day-trips with the triumph and downfalls that beset all young birders. For a time, Andrew gives up the hobby, but he later rekindles the interest and, with his girlfriend (now wife), he travels more widely. Andrew never makes it into what I am sure he would see as the upper echelons of birding and clearly feels a bit of an outsider and, in that respect, I think his story will feel familiar to many people. This is a short read, but an enjoyable one, and better than I expected. --Birding World, April 2012 Andrew Fallan has written the latest in a recent growing genre of birders autobiographies. Fallan describes how he got the bug, what this has led to through his life and many of the ups and downs of this pastime. - This endearing tale recounts the continuous, occasionally desperate search for those rarities that appear in the UK occasionally, the failures and the successes, trials and tribulations of chasing birds, and reported sightings around the UK. Fallan lives in Essex, not known as a destination for great birding, and seems to spend much of the book longing for Norfolk, where he and his partner have many successes, but find themselves being brushed aside by some of the 'me first' crowd. - Packham says "I do definitely concur with his thoughts on a proportion of the twitching fraternity. They actually put me off birding for a while in the same fashion that football thuggery put me off going to see the beautiful game." wildlifeextra.com Andrew Fallan's concept of birding for 'low-flyers' certainly strikes a chord; after all, we can't all be the next birding equivalent of George Michael or Richard Dawkins ... The author has an acute sense of self-awareness and integrity - - British Trust for Ornithology The book celebrates a pure and unpretentious approach to birding that many birders could gain something from. The reason many of us go birding comes from a powerful and deep-seated connection that is impossible to explain to friends and family who question the attraction of traipsing around lonely marshes and woodlands, with binoculars swinging from the neck. At least, it's something that's hard to explain in a single conversation, but Andrew Fallan, in this short book, has more or less put his finger on the simple magic of watching birds - The book takes a refreshingly down-to-earth and holistic view of enjoying birds. It serves very well as a reminder of the great pleasure that is to be had by, for instance, forgetting about getting your head around the mirrors and tongue on P10 and instead looking in raw wonder at the refined form that is a gull against a marvellous coastal backdrop. Communicating the fulfilment in taking this basic approach is something that Fallan does excellently - - Birdwatch magazine

Table of Contents
About the Author Foreword Acknowledgements Chapter 1 It started with a Kestrel... Chapter 2 Birding for low-flyers Chapter 3 Boys, bikes and birds Chapter 4 Further afield Chapter 5 Even further afield Chapter 6 The wilderness years Chapter 7 Return from exile Chapter 8 A match made in Norfolk Chapter 9 Targeted strikes Chapter 10 Of owls and raptors Chapter 11 Optical debacles Chapter 12 In search of raptors - again Chapter 13 Capercaillies - they don't exist! Chapter 14 A twitch too far Bibliography

Winging it Birding for Lowflyers

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      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Foreword by Chris Packham. The author recounts his own experiences - the highs and the lows, the trials and tribulations - of being an avid birder in a world seemingly populated by experts and high-flyers. Join him on an often humorous and irreverent journey around the UK.

      Trade Review
      ...From the rivalry between the author and his brother as children and their adventures, to his rediscovery of nature in all its glory, especially the winged kind, was the journey of a man with a passion that is detailed beautifully in this volume. The author writes with ease and imagination and his prose is a joy to read. The fact that he documents visits to some of my favourite wildlife watching spots made it even more entertaining but above all his love of nature shines through. This tale is accompanied by a parallel story of romance as he manages to find a like minded soul mate. A very enjoyable read. --Jenny Steel, www.wildlife-gardening.co.uk There is no birder out there who never gets it wrong, although there are a great many who would have you believe otherwise so it is refreshing to tag along with an average birder who can demonstrate that the richness and beauty of birding is all about the experience not the theory. Nice one Andrew. --Fatbirder Feb. 2012 The latest in a fairly long line of birding and twitching books, this tells the story of Andrew's journey into birdwatching as a boy. Early trips with his brother to the marshes in Essex and Kent will ring bells with many of us who followed similar paths of birding. There are many accounts of day-trips with the triumph and downfalls that beset all young birders. For a time, Andrew gives up the hobby, but he later rekindles the interest and, with his girlfriend (now wife), he travels more widely. Andrew never makes it into what I am sure he would see as the upper echelons of birding and clearly feels a bit of an outsider and, in that respect, I think his story will feel familiar to many people. This is a short read, but an enjoyable one, and better than I expected. --Birding World, April 2012 Andrew Fallan has written the latest in a recent growing genre of birders autobiographies. Fallan describes how he got the bug, what this has led to through his life and many of the ups and downs of this pastime. - This endearing tale recounts the continuous, occasionally desperate search for those rarities that appear in the UK occasionally, the failures and the successes, trials and tribulations of chasing birds, and reported sightings around the UK. Fallan lives in Essex, not known as a destination for great birding, and seems to spend much of the book longing for Norfolk, where he and his partner have many successes, but find themselves being brushed aside by some of the 'me first' crowd. - Packham says "I do definitely concur with his thoughts on a proportion of the twitching fraternity. They actually put me off birding for a while in the same fashion that football thuggery put me off going to see the beautiful game." wildlifeextra.com Andrew Fallan's concept of birding for 'low-flyers' certainly strikes a chord; after all, we can't all be the next birding equivalent of George Michael or Richard Dawkins ... The author has an acute sense of self-awareness and integrity - - British Trust for Ornithology The book celebrates a pure and unpretentious approach to birding that many birders could gain something from. The reason many of us go birding comes from a powerful and deep-seated connection that is impossible to explain to friends and family who question the attraction of traipsing around lonely marshes and woodlands, with binoculars swinging from the neck. At least, it's something that's hard to explain in a single conversation, but Andrew Fallan, in this short book, has more or less put his finger on the simple magic of watching birds - The book takes a refreshingly down-to-earth and holistic view of enjoying birds. It serves very well as a reminder of the great pleasure that is to be had by, for instance, forgetting about getting your head around the mirrors and tongue on P10 and instead looking in raw wonder at the refined form that is a gull against a marvellous coastal backdrop. Communicating the fulfilment in taking this basic approach is something that Fallan does excellently - - Birdwatch magazine

      Table of Contents
      About the Author Foreword Acknowledgements Chapter 1 It started with a Kestrel... Chapter 2 Birding for low-flyers Chapter 3 Boys, bikes and birds Chapter 4 Further afield Chapter 5 Even further afield Chapter 6 The wilderness years Chapter 7 Return from exile Chapter 8 A match made in Norfolk Chapter 9 Targeted strikes Chapter 10 Of owls and raptors Chapter 11 Optical debacles Chapter 12 In search of raptors - again Chapter 13 Capercaillies - they don't exist! Chapter 14 A twitch too far Bibliography

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