Birding can become an addiction. It starts when you hang a bird
feeder in the backyard. Then you buy a bird book to identify the
birds you see. Then, before you know it, you're keeping a life list
and traveling the region, the country, perhaps even the world to
catch glimpses of rare birds. Marjorie Adams's birding passion
progressed through all these stages and continues today in her
tenth decade. In this engaging and informative book, she looks back
at her evolution into a full-fledged birder and the concurrent
growth of the sport of birding, to which she contributed
significantly as a founding member of the American Birding
Association, a newspaper columnist on birding, and a teacher and
producer of educational wildlife films with her husband and
lifelong birding partner, "Red" Adams.
As one who was there from the beginning, Marjorie Adams is
uniquely qualified to recount the astonishing rise of birding to a
major pastime and recreational industry. She describes the founding
of the American Birding Association and profiles its founder, James
A. Tucker. She vividly recalls many of her and Red's birding
adventures, from southern Canada to Mexico, as well as their
encounters with a host of highly regarded birders, including Roger
Tory Peterson, Pete Dunne, Victor Emanuel, Charles Hartshorne, and
Roy Bedichek. She also explains how her and Red's love for birds
led them to become conservation activists and how they produced an
award-winning film on the endangered Golden-cheeked Warbler.
Offering an important chapter in the story of birding in Texas and
the United States, this book establishes Marjorie and Red Adams's
rightful place among the leading Texas naturalists of recent
decades.
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