backyard birds attract identify find
Identify, feed, help and attract wild birds to your yard and garden.
backyard
birding

 

Bird eBook and Articles:

Free Resource to download - Bird Feeder Favorites...

Article: Attract Wild Birds and Song Birds by Giving them What They Need! - Have you ever walked past someone's backyard and saw it absolutely alive with birds and butterflies? And wondered if your garden...

Article: Attracting Even More Birds To Your Backyard - Here's a really neat trick to get more birds to your backyard bird bath! Install a bird bath dripper. Now many people do this by...

 

 

A Bird Book to Read Online:

If you're an avid reader and lover of birds you'll enjoy this birding resource book originally written in 1897. This published version of the book is now ©2004 Veronica Bond as revisions have been made to the text and bird pictures added. I hope you enjoy it!

The birds identified and discussed in this book are native and migratory in a very broad generalization to the north-eastern region of the US and to eastern Canada.

This bird book is titled Wild Bird Neighbors - An Introduction to 150 Birds Commonly Found in Nearby Gardens, Meadows, and Woods. Based on the 1922 edition of Neltje Blanchan with an intro by John Burroughs.

Editor's Note: It is believed that this was one of the very first bird fielder's guide to be printed. Many mentions are made of a larger Audubon book being used as a primary reference - which was too heavy to lug into the bush or to take on bird-watching hikes. This bird book was small and the verbiage was brief.

How To Read this Online Book

Both the Table of Contents and Introduction are below. All other sections are orderly linked to separate pages. While on any other page, links to each section will be shown in the left column. You'll see when you get there - it's just like flipping pages of a regular book! Skip around to any section you like at any time you like. Enjoy!

Wild Bird Neighbors - An Introduction to 150 Birds Commonly Found in Nearby Gardens, Meadows, and Woods

TABLE OF CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION BY JOHN BURROUGHS

PREFACE

  1. BIRD FAMILIES: Characteristics and Representatives of Each Bird Family included in "Wild Bird Neighbors"

  2. HABITS AND HABITATS OF LOCAL BIRDS

  3. SEASONS OF BIRDS and SAMPLE MIGRATORY PATTERS

  4. BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO SIZE

  5. DESCRIPTIONS OF BIRDS GROUPED ACCORDING TO COLOR

INTRODUCTION

I write these few introductory sentences to this volume only to second so worthy an attempt to quicken and enlarge the general interest in our birds.

The book itself is merely an introduction, and is only designed to place a few clues in the reader's hands which he or she is to follow up. I can say that it is reliable and is written in a vivacious strain and by a real bird lover, and should prove a help and a stimulus to any one who seeks by the aid of its pages to become better acquainted with our songsters. The various grouping of the birds according to color, season, habitat, etc., ought to render the identification of the birds, with no other weapon than a set of binoculars.

But you do not want to make out your bird the first time; this book must not make wild bird identification too easy for you. You must see and hear your bird under varying conditions and get a good hold of several of its characteristic traits. Things easily learned are apt to be easily forgotten. Some ladies, beginning the study of birds, once wrote to me, asking if I would not please come and help them, and set them right about certain birds in dispute. I replied that that would be getting their knowledge too easily; that what I and any one else told them they would be very apt to forget, but that the things they found out themselves they would always remember. We must in a way earn what we have or keep. Only thus does it become ours, a real part of us.

Not very long afterward I had the pleasure of walking with one of the ladies, and I found her eye and ear quite as sharp as my own, and that she was in a fair way to conquer the bird kingdom without any outside help. She said that the groves and fields, through which she used to walk with only a languid interest, were now completely transformed to her and afforded her the keenest pleasure; a whole new world of interest had been disclosed to her; she felt as if she was constantly on the eve of some new discovery; the next turn in the path might reveal to her a new warbler or a new vireo. I remember the thrill she seemed to experience when I called her attention to a purple finch singing in the tree-tops in front of her house, a rare visitant she had not before heard. The thrill would of course have been greater had she identified the bird without my aid. One would rather bag one's own game.

The experience of this lady is the experience of all in whom is kindled this bird enthusiasm. A new interest is added to life. If you have only a city yard with a few sickly trees in it, you will find great delight in noting the numerous bird stragglers from the great army of spring and autumn migrants that find their way there. If you live in the country, it is as if new eyes and new ears were given you, with a correspondingly increased capacity for rural enjoyment.

The birds link themselves to your memory of seasons and places, so that a song, a call, a gleam of color, set going a sequence of delightful reminiscences in your mind. When a solitary great Carolina wren came one August day and took up its abode near me and sang and called and warbled as I had heard it long before on the Potomac, how it brought the old days, the old scenes back again, and made me for the moment younger by all those years!

A few seasons ago I feared the tribe of bluebirds were on the verge of extinction from the enormous number of them that perished from cold and hunger in the South in the winter of '94. For two summers not a blue wing, not a blue warble. I seemed to miss something kindred and precious from my environment -- the visible embodiment of the tender sky and the wistful soil. What a loss, I said, to the coming generations of dwellers in the country -- no bluebird in the spring! What will the farm-boy date from? But the fear was groundless: the birds are regaining their lost ground; broods of young bluebirds are seen again drifting from stake to stake or from mullen-stalk to mullen-stalk in summer, and our April air will doubtless again be warmed and thrilled by this lovely harbinger of spring. -- JOHN BURROUGHS, August 19, 1897

N E X T - Preface to Wild Bird Neighbors


  

New Stock
Every Day!

Bird Baths
Solar Bird Baths
Bird Bath Fountains

Bird Feeders
Finch Feeder
Glass Nectar Feeders






finch
birdwatcher
© 2004-2008

Attract Wild Birds - CONTACT - 613.332.5766

Bird Book