I wrote this book in the memory of all the mentors, the old guard of naturalists who taught me so much, but more importantly for the new wave, the guardians of the future, to whom we hand over the baton. I include my own little naturalist in this number; Elvie this book is for you. Contents Foreword Introduction The essential hardware: equipment Feathered and flighty: birds Big game: mammals The earth creepers: reptiles and amphibians Fish fantastic Spineless wonders: invertebrates and insects Getting botanical: plants and allies Going further Further reading Image credits Foreword Having spent some of the most enjoyable years of my life researching, writing and filming The Amateur Naturalist with my late husband, Gerald Durrell, I was delighted to be asked to write this foreword for Nick Baker’s The Complete Naturalist and eager to see the finished manuscript. How was Nick going to handle the vast subject of natural history, what exciting new ideas and techniques had he come across, would he have had as much fun as Gerry and I did putting the information together? Did he hope, as we hoped, that a generation of readers would take the book to their hearts and learn to cherish nature and become part of the movement to protect it? My keen anticipation was hugely rewarded, and I was enticed into the natural world all over again by this book. It begins very sensibly with what equipment you need as an amateur naturalist, offering tips as to how to choose and use it, from binoculars and hand lenses to notebooks and clothing. It then leads you logically through the animal and plant kingdoms: mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians, fish, invertebrates and plants. You get a solid grounding in what to look for and how to observe it, but Nick also grabs your attention with unusual facts – how to tell a right-handed from a left-handed squirrel, for example – punctuated with the occasional hysterically funny personal reminiscence. The activities he suggests are creative and fun, such as recognising bird calls in the dawn chorus, a foolproof method for rearing tadpoles, what you do to preserve a spider’s web. The projects are all safe and eco-friendly as well. Nick has a deft style and quirky sense of humour that brings to life the animals and plants he is writing about. More than anything, he makes you want to spend time outdoors becoming a nature detective. He teaches you how to pick up and interpret signs that reveal an animal’s behaviour, and to gather clues that will unravel ecological mysteries. This is an updated and expanded version of Nick’s The New Amateur Naturalist, and I am convinced that this book is more important today, ten years later, than ever before. We humans absolutely must understand the natural world. We need to know what its components are and how they come together to make operational ecosystems. We must appreciate how the ecosystems in turn influence each other to make the whole planet tick. Otherwise, the rate at which we change the natural order of things will outpace our ability to correct our environmental mistakes, let along avoid making them in the first place. We can already see our eco-blunders wherever we look – severe floods and droughts and actual and imminent extinctions of animals and plants are examples of the consequences of the human ‘footprint’ on the planet. But if decisions which impact on the environment are made by people who understand and cherish the natural world, then our tread will be lighter and the planet a more hospitable place for all its inhabitants in the future. The more youngsters are encouraged to pursue natural history, the more likely it is that they, as the decision-makers of the future, will make the right choices. Lee Durrell 19 December 2014 Introduction For as long as I can remember I have been mesmerised by plants and animals, and not just the living, breathing ones. Everything about them, feeding signs and other evidence they leave behind, even their dead bodies can tell us so much about them. But although I have been an amateur naturalist all my life, to this day I continue to learn how and where to look at the living world. That is really what this book is about – using my experiences and the tricks of the trade that I have amassed over the years to gain more insight into the world we live in. My interest started as soon as I could crawl and pretty soon I was putting my mother through situations no mother can be prepared for: giant silk moths in the wardrobe, tarantulas under the bed and the countless dead animals I would find while out and about and bring home to dismantle at leisure – a form of behaviour my family found particularly disturbing! But to me there was very little difference between wishing to see and understand the internal workings of an animal and my brother pulling a lawn-mower engine to pieces for the same reason. Through those dark, misunderstood times, a wonderful book called The Amateur Naturalist by Gerald and Lee Durrell became my friend, inspiring me to look, investigate and satisfy my natural curiosity. That book was a major influence on my becoming a naturalist, and it was very much the inspiration behind this one. I am deeply grateful to Lee Durrell for providing such a generous foreword to The Complete Naturalist. Things haven’t changed much since those early days, despite the fact that I am now a responsible adult with my own house – my home is still stuffed full of natural curios, both living animals and the inevitable collections of debris, skulls, bones and feathers. To me this hands-on approach is totally in keeping with the ethos of this book. You will never really understand something by looking at pictures and writing. Just as you need to stroke a feather to comprehend what an extraordinary combination of form and function it is, you also need to turn a skull over in your hands if you really want to appreciate the beauty of this remarkable collection of bones.
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