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Books > Travel > Travel writing > General
’n Stuk of 50 stories waarin Dana Snyman besin oor enigiets van fopnuus tot ’n 40ste skoolreünie. Hy vertel van sy kennismaking met Eugène Terre’Blanche en van die Bogosi-gesin wat by hom op Jacobsbaai gewoon het. Hy vertel hoe mense na mekaar probeer uitreik in die land. Hoe ons mekaar soek en nie altyd vind nie. Ten slotte vertel hy van sy verloofde se selfdood en hoe hy daarná byna al sy besittings weggee en die pad vat.
The Meaning of Geese is a book of thrilling encounters with
wildlife, of tired legs, punctured tyres and inhospitable weather.
Above all, it is the story of Nick Acheson's love for the land in
which he was born and raised, and for the wild geese that fill it
with sound and spectacle every winter. Renowned naturalist and
conservationist Nick Acheson spent countless hours observing and
researching wild geese, transported through all weathers by his
mother's 40-year-old trusty red bicycle. He meticulously details
the geese's arrival, observing what they mean to his beloved
Norfolk and the role they play in local people's lives - and what
role the birds could play in our changing world. During a time when
many people faced the prospect of little work or human contact,
Nick followed the pinkfeet and brent geese that filled the Norfolk
skies and landscape as they flew in from Iceland and Siberia. In
their flocks, Nick encountered rarer geese, including Russian
white-fronts, barnacle geese and an extremely unusual grey-bellied
brant, a bird he had dreamt of seeing since thumbing his mother's
copy of Peter Scott's field guide as a child. To honour the geese's
great athletic migrations, Nick kept a diary of his sightings as
well as the stories he discovered through the community of people,
past and present, who loved them, too. Over seven months Nick
cycles over 1,200 miles - the exact length of the pinkfeet's
migration to Iceland.
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