What Birdo is that?
A Field Guide to Bird-people
- Paperback
$40.00$30.00$40.00$30.00$40.00$30.00$40.00$36.00 $40.00
What Birdo is that?
A Field Guide to Bird-people
- Paperback
$40.00$30.00$40.00$30.00$40.00$30.00$40.00$36.00 $40.00
A Field Guide to Bird-people
A Field Guide to Bird-people
Searching for Spotty: the lure of the legend of Sherbrooke Forest
In my family, ornithology meant lyrebirds. Not long before I started school we moved to the market town of Croydon, then just beyond the fringes of suburban Melbourne. The Dandenong Ranges were our back yard – too close when bushfires swept through in the summer of 1962 and my father joined the firefighters and came home late, blackened, with his eyebrows singed. In late autumn and early winter, however, the mountains were cool, friendly and at peace. Dad and I would rise at 5am, long before dawn, and creep around a chilly and dripping Sherbrooke Forest with sticky black soil clinging to our hands and knees.
The GuardianLibby Robin What Birdo is That? A Field Guide to Bird-people
As a dweller of the littoral, my love of birds was initially fired by the “otherness” of seabirds. Years ago, researching for a never-finished book, I spent many landlocked hours in the old Royal Australasian Ornithologists Union (RAOU) archive in Moonee Ponds, gathering information on topics such as the sleeping habits of albatrosses or the breathtaking velocity of diving gannets.
The Saturday PaperMad for the feathers
I like this book. A lot. And I like the author. I don’t know her, but I like the way she writes. And it’s lovely to read a book you like, written by someone whose name sounds like a nom de plume, or as my aunty (an avid birder) used to say, a Nundah plum. Libby Robin is the perfect name for an author of a book about birds and birders — or birdos, as she delightfully calls Australian bird fanciers. She has a uniquely Australian way of looking at those whose passion, interest and even careers centre on birds.
Inside Story