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How to Be a Better Birder [Paperback]

Derek Lovitch
4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 5, 2012

This unique illustrated handbook provides all the essential tools you need to become a better birder. Here Derek Lovitch offers a more effective way to go about identification--he calls it the "Whole Bird and More" approach--that will enable you to identify more birds, more quickly, more of the time. He demonstrates how to use geography and an understanding of habitats, ecology, and even the weather to enrich your birding experience and help you find something out of the ordinary. Lovitch shows how to track nocturnal migrants using radar, collect data for bird conservation, discover exciting rarities, develop patch lists--and much more.

This is the ideal resource for intermediate and advanced birders. Whether you want to build a bigger list or simply learn more about birds, How to Be a Better Birder will take your birding skills to the next level.

  • Explains the "Whole Bird and More" approach to bird identification
  • Demonstrates how to use geography, habitats, ecology, and the weather to be a better birder
  • Shows how to bird at night using radar, collect conservation data, develop patch lists--and more
  • Offers essential tools for intermediate and advanced birders

Frequently Bought Together

How to Be a Better Birder + Art of Bird Finding, The: Before You ID Them, You Have to See Them + Art of Bird Identification, The: A Straightforward Approach to Putting a Name to the Bird
Price for all three: $38.75

Buy the selected items together


Editorial Reviews

Review

Becoming a better birder requires practice, but Lovitch provides the tools for those willing to put in the work to be the best they can be. (Michele Berger Audubon magazine )

The goal of birding, of any hobby, is expertise gratia sua, and the only reason we do it is to do it better. This slender new volume by Derek Lovitch will help almost any birder do just that. . . . Lovitch is at his very best in the book's central chapters, where he offers detailed instruction in reading weather forecasts for finding birds . . . the skills we're taught in this book will make it even more fun--and make us all better birders. (Rick Wright American Birding Association )

This book will be most useful for intermediate level birders. The section on NEXRAD radar will be useful to all birders. (Ian Paulsen Birdbooker Report )

Birders of all backgrounds and skill levels are almost certain to learn something useful in Derek Lovitch's book How to Be a Better Birder. Can you become a better birder? This book offers a resounding 'yes' to that question. Refreshingly, this book is not filled with diagnostic plates and diagrams to study, but a 'whole bird and more' holistic approach to ID, and to the overall pastime of birding as well. As you will discover, the author offers a lot of ways on becoming a better birder that go beyond being able to correctly identify birds in the field. (Mike McDowell Digiscoper Blog )

How to Be a Better Birder is for birders who have moved from the beginner stages and want to hone their skills. . . . If you can identify most birds in your neighbourhood and want to learn more so that you can really enjoy the fun of birding wherever you go, then Derek Lovitch's book will be a useful guide to hours of enjoyment in watching our wild birds. (Rob Butler Vancouver Sun )

Birders at any experience level will find something of interest in this slender volume. (Penny Miller A Charm of Finches )

Derek Lovitch has written a book which is useful for birders at any level of proficiency from the beginner to the obsessive lister. (Dorothy Borders Nature of Things )

[How to Be a Better Birder] is written in a chatty, enthusiastic and accessible style which works well. Lovitch is a great communicator and it is hard not to be enthused by the examples provided of how to generate your own 'great days in the field.' . . . For those with a little less experience, this book provides a fabulous store of information and encouragement which will certainly make your birding more purposeful, productive and enjoyable. (Andy Stoddart's blog )

Birdwatchers bent on self-improvement will want to turn to Derek Lovitch's How to Be a Better Birder. . . . Writing in the accessible, breezy prose of a blog, Lovitch provides a rich compendium of tools, techniques, and resources useful to anyone who's mastered elementary bird watching. Among the tools discussed are botany, maps, meteorology, and NEXRAD; a list of print and web resources for further study is included in each discussion. The amount of information packed into this brief handbook is formidable. Interspersed among the technical details--and perhaps equally informative--are the author's personal stories of birding adventures and misadventures told with self-effacing humor. (Fannie Peczenik Pittsburgh Bird Watching Examiner )

How to Be a Better Birder is a very different kind of birding book, and, once you think about it, the perfect book to be written at this particular moment in the birding universe. . . . Strategic has become an overused word in some areas, but that is really what Derek Lovitch is presenting in this slim volume, a way to maximize our time in the field, to see the most and the best birds possible using field experience and technology. Do you want to be a better birder, a strategic birder? I think there is something in this book that will help birders at every level. (Donna Schulman 10,000 Birds blog )

While there is no trick or fast-track to being a great birder, this book provides a lot of easy to follow and easy to practice methods to increase your birding skills and your enjoyment of birding. . . . The tone and flow of the book allow you to gradually learn new methods to be a better birder. You're bound to find several nuggets of information that you can use today, tomorrow, and always in the search for more birds. (Eddie Callaway Birdfreak.com )

A birding book that should fly off the shelves. . . . To become proficient at any activity, we all know the mantra: practice, practice, practice. Lovitch urges us to really study all the birds we see, including the most common birds around us. He also suggests that a more holistic approach to bird identification may be a more fruitful way to go about the process of identifying a bird. (Herb Wilson Portland Press Herald )

A new take on a well-rehearsed subject. . . . It breaks new ground in its discussions of how, where and when to find vagrants, rarities and large numbers of migrating birds. (Towheeblog )

Derek Lovitch uses his years of experience birding in Maine and around the world to describe the field skills of top-notch birders. He explains how to use habitat, geography, and weather to find more birds and to anticipate vagrants. And he argues that if we care about the future of birds, we must bird with a purpose, joining citizen-science projects and submitting sightings to eBird. (Bird Watching Magazine )

This is an easy read that, even for a serious birder, can serve to shine a light on how old-fashioned field skills can be brought into play more quickly and more often through the use of technology, to determine where the birds are most likely to be found, when they're most likely to be there, and why. When that special life-list vagrant from across the country happens to show up, you'll know right away how to find it before the rest of the crowd. Even top-notch birders can sharpen their skills in an evening spent with this book. (Birding Business Magazine )

Full of enthusiasm and some humor, this book stresses (more than most other birding titles) the importance of understanding weather and the possibilities of nighttime birding, especially when enhanced by easy-to-use radars. In this way, it is as successfully specific as it is well rounded. With engaging anecdotes and autobiographical experiences mixed in, this title achieves the perfect balance of detail and brevity. (Henry Armistead Library Journal )

Lovitch provides a good resource for birders who want to go beyond the basics. Calling his approach the 'Whole Bird and More,' the author presents his system in clear language and with examples mostly drawn from his experiences in the field. (Nancy Bent Booklist )

[I]t is written in a chatty, enthusiastic and accessible style which works well. Lovitch is a great communicator and it is hard not to be enthused by the examples provided of how to generate your own 'great days in the field'. . . . [T]his book provides a fabulous store of information and encouragement which will certainly make your birding more purposeful, productive and enjoyable. (Andy Stoddart North Norfolk Birds )

We've come a long way in our quest to put a name to everything that flies, but the biggest tricks in a birder's arsenal aren't necessarily employed to differentiate subadult gulls and silent Empids. Turns out there's a reason certain birders are particularly adept at sniffing out rarities and tracking down vagrants. And Derek Lovitch's new book from Princeton University Press, seductively titled How to Be a Better Birder, seeks to spill all their secrets. (Nate Swick Drinking Bird )

[T]he book will no doubt inspire many birdwatchers to take their birding skills to the next level. (Bryan Bland Birding World )

This is a good book for experienced birders. It will cause you to think through your current birding habits and challenge you to expand your knowledge and skills. . . . Chance does favor the prepared mind. I will buy this book. (Robert E. Hoopes Wildlife Activist )

This book, however, is unexpectedly exciting, intriguing and inspiring--It makes me want to get out there, learn what the heck I'm doing, do it better, and actually strive to become, just like the title says, a better birder. (Cathy Taibbi Wildlife Conservation Examiner )

A lovely, well written and pretty well illustrated guide that focuses, in my view, mainly on one thing you can do to improve your birding: Pay attention to and exploit your knowledge of context. (Greg Laden's Blog )

How To Be A Better Birder is a quick read and an important addition to a birder's education. . . . The tips and methods discussed at length in the book take out much of the guesswork in finding a variety of birds on the landscape, including rarities and vagrants. The best part however, is getting out and having fun. Birding is not about getting birds on a list; it is about enjoying birds and seeing them in the wild. Use Lovitch's book as a launching pad to get out and bird with a purpose. (Howard O. Clark, Jr. Candian Field Naturalist )

How to Be a Better Birder will undoubtedly encourage other birders to become more active in the field, and is recommended to anyone interested in improving their birding knowledge and skills in many different ways. (Christopher J. Butler Ibis )

This small book will help birders have better chances at seeing birds. (Valerie Cunningham Cardinal newsletter )

This is a fun book and one that holds promise to boost the reader's birding skills. (Val Cunningham Minneapolis Star Tribune )

From the Back Cover

"This book is useful for those wanting a convenient introduction to birding as it is currently practiced by many of the leaders in the North American field. The writing is informative and conversational, a good balance to strike when trying to make more advanced birding techniques accessible to a broader audience."--Jeffrey A. Gordon, president of the American Birding Association


Product Details

  • Paperback: 208 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (March 5, 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0691144486
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691144481
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.5 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 15.2 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #316,947 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4.3 out of 5 stars
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4.3 out of 5 stars
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Unique Perspective on Birding May 14, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
The description of the book is, in my opinion, a little misleading. I thought more of the book was going to be about Lovitch's "whole bird and more" concept of birding when in reality it was only 1 of the 9 chapters. However, I found all of his science-based concepts intriguing and helpful. I don't know if I'd ever have the patience to figure out on my own the whole radar and weather approach to finding birds, but if a local class were offered on the topic I'd definitely take it, especially if I lived close to a migration fly-way. The book would have been more helpful had the radar pictures been big enough to actually see what the author was describing. On the other hand, all the URLs for birding, radar, and weather sites were outstanding.

If you're a birder who has the time and financial resources to bird more frequently than the average person, then this book would be an invaluable tool to increase your chances of finding more birds more consistently. Even if you're just a casual birder, there are enough tidbits to make you more successful.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An Important Perspective On Birding June 24, 2012
Format:Paperback
Lovitch outlines a number of techniques that I believe would be useful for both occasional and frequent birders. In separate chapters Lovitch explains how a birder can combine the information in field guides about the habitats and behaviours of birds with what is actually happening at the locale itself with regard to geography, weather, season and the night times in order to understand what may be happening to the birds in migration. Birders can then find places with greater likelihood of seeing the birds of their interest.

I loved the chapter on using the `Whole Bird" approach to identifying the bird. I've been using this approach for many years myself and tell my readers to do the same, honing in on the finer more unique patterns to identify individual birds. The more exposure we give our brains to looking at the shape of the birds in flight, or while perched at a distance, the better we become at identifying them from a distance. Lovitch's sketches of the different sparrows is an amazing example of how the brain can be trained to pick the slight differences in the shape and features of even small birds.

The chapter on Citizen Science explains how birders can extend their love of birds beyond bird-spotting and bird photography to helping in their study and conservation. I believe this is going to become increasingly important in the future.

While the resources and examples are mostly North American, I believe that the techniques described in How to Be a Better Birder can be applied by bird lovers in any country.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Thinking about the whole bird December 31, 2012
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Lovitch is a professional birder who owns and operates Freeport Wild Bird Supply in Maine. He has been involved in avian research and continues to lead birding tours for groups. Lovitch was also a columnist for Birding magazine. In this book, Lovitch combines his knowledge and personal experience into advice for becoming a better birder. If you have no interest in birds or birding, do not read this book. If you have the slightest bit of interest, Lovitch's enthusiasm and passion will certainly rub off on you.

This book emphasizes and centers around a popular strategy for identifying birds called the "whole-bird approach." With this technique, you as a birder should not just rely on field markings to identify a bird. You should look at everything, including behavior, weather, habitat, food options, and climate data. Lovitch has organized the chapters to include helpful advice on how to look at and analyze these different areas.

Although Lovitch uses quite a bit of scientific terminology, this book can actually still, and should, be used by beginning birders. You will find every chapter helpful simply because of the sources that he references. As you read through chapter 1, you will be introduced to around 20 sources (i.e. books, field guides, articles, etc.), in which Lovitch also adds his personal "mini-reviews" of each one. I found it helpful to make the note "reference" every time Lovitch wrote about a specific field guide or book. This way, I can go back later and look for a particular source.

This book is an excellent resource for birders. Not only can it be read in a short time, but you will find yourself going back to it time and time again after spending quality time in the field.
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