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Wild Isles (Hardcover)
Patrick Barkham, Alastair Fothergill
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R845
R740
Discovery Miles 7 400
Save R105 (12%)
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Ships in 9 - 17 working days
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This beautifully illustrated overview of the wildlife of the
British Isles showcases the diversity of our plant and animal life.
Wild Isles is a celebration of the wildlife found on a relatively
modest collection of islands positioned at a latitude so northerly
to be unattractive to many animals and plants. Despite these
unpromising foundations, the islands of Britain and Ireland,
together with more than 6,000 lesser islets that make up our
archipelago, contain some of the most diverse, beautiful and
wildlife-rich landscapes and seas on our planet. This book will
explore the fascinating relationships within and between species
who make their home on our beautiful isles. Each chapter focuses on
a particular kind of wild space. Britain and Ireland are dominated
by a wide variety of grasslands from lowland water meadows to
upland moors, and we will see how these human-shaped, semi-natural
landscapes thrum with insect, bird and mammal life. Life requires
water to flourish, and streams and rivers carry freshwater through
our landscape, creating unique ecosystems and interrelations within
and beside these waters, which are revealed in a third section.
While Britain and Ireland’s woodlands are comparatively thin on
the ground compared with most of continental Europe, we will see
some of the forests and trees that remain are unusually ancient
and, great repositories of life. Finally, of course, we are
surrounded by sea, and our position on the continental shelf before
it plunges into the depths of the Atlantic Ocean gives rise to an
often overlooked plenty of marine life. A glorious richness divided
into five breathtaking sections.
'The Swimmer is a wonderful, original achievement; teeming with
stories, glittering with images, and experimental in form and tone'
Robert Macfarlane Roger Deakin is best known for his modern classic
of nature writing, Waterlog, which frog-kicked the wild swimming
movement into existence with wit, politics and poetry. But he was
not simply a dazzling writer and eccentric Englishman. He took his
counterculture to the countryside in the 1970s and rebuilt a 16th
century farmhouse from its oak beams up. He turned to
self-sufficiency, teaching and environmentalism. He became a music
impresario and made films, radio programmes and hundreds of friends
from all classes. He was a polymath, an enthusiast, an adventurer,
a romantic and rebel. Delving deep into Roger Deakin's library of
words, Patrick Barkham draws from notebooks, diaries, letters,
recordings, published work and early drafts, to conjure his voice
back to glorious life in these pages, revealing the inner life of
an extraordinary man. 'A rich, strange and compelling work of
creative memoir that beautifully honours and elevates the life and
work of its subject' Alex Preston, Observer
Butterflies animate our summers but the fifty-nine species found in
the British Isles can be surprisingly elusive. Some bask unseen at
the top of trees in London parks; others lurk at the bottom of damp
bogs in Scotland. A few survive for months, while other ephemeral
creatures only fly for three days. Several are virtually extinct.
This bewitching book charts Patrick Barkham's quest to find each of
them - from the Adonis Blue to the Dingy Skipper - in one
unforgettable summer. Wry, attentive, full of infectious delight
and curiosity, written with a beautifully light touch, The
Butterfly Isles is a classic of British nature writing.
LONGLISTED FOR THE WAINWRIGHT PRIZE The collected writings from one
of the nation's most celebrated nature writers. 'Barkham is an
outstanding author.' CHRIS PACKHAM 'Wonder-filled . . . A treat.
Patrick knows how to tell a good story, and that combination of
kindness, wonder and good fortune that seems to be present in his
own life shines through.' CAUGHT BY THE RIVER What is happening to
nature? What are we as a species doing about it? What have we
learned? Wild Green Wonders paints a portrait of contemporary
wildlife, bearing witness to the many changes imposed upon the
planet and the challenges lying ahead for the future of nature.
From peregrine falcons nesting by the Thames to a conversation with
Sir David Attenborough; from protests against the HS2 railway to an
encounter with Britain's last lion tamer, this collection - drawn
from twenty years' worth of Patrick Barkham's writing for the
Guardian - forms a joyful, fascinating and enlightening chronicle
of one of the nation's most celebrated nature writers. 'Outstanding
nature journalism.' HORATIO CLARE 'A heralded nature writer.' THE
TIMES 'A lovely, fluid writer.' DAILY MAIL
In 1948, shortly after settling with his family in the village of
Blaxhall, Suffolk, George Ewart Evans started recording the
conversations he had with neighbours, many of whom were born in the
nineteenth century and had worked on farms before the arrival of
mechanisation. He soon realised that below the surface of their
stories were the remnants of an ancient, rural culture previously
ignored by historians. In the detail of village architecture, the
of superstitions of tree-planting and rituals house-building, in
the esoteric practices of horse cults or the pagan habit of
'telling the bees', The Pattern Under the Plough unearths the rich
seam of customs and beliefs that this old culture has brought to
our communities. Even in modern societies, governed by science and
technology, there are still traces of a civilisation whose beliefs
were bound to the soil and whose reliance on the seasons was a
matter of life or death.
Told through a series of walks beside the sea, this is a story of
the most beautiful 742 miles of coastline in England, Wales and
Northern Ireland: their rocks, plants and animals, their views,
walks and history, and the people who have made their lives within
sight of the waves. As he travels along coastal paths, visits
beaches and explores coves, Barkham reflects on the long campaign
to protect our shoreline from tidal erosion and human damage and
weaves together fascinating tales about every aspect of the coast -
from ancient conquests and smuggler's routes, to exotic migratory
birds and bucket-and-spade holidays - to tell a more profound story
about our island nation and the way we are shaped by our shores.
The British Isles are an archipelago made up of two large islands
and 6,289 smaller ones. Some, like the Isle of Man, resemble
miniature nations, with their own language and tax laws; others,
like Ray Island in Essex, are abandoned and mysterious places
haunted by myths, ghosts and foxes. There are resurgent islands
such as Eigg, which have been liberated from capricious owners to
be run by their residents; holy islands like Bardsey, the resting
place of 20,000 saints, and still a site of spiritual questing; and
deserted islands such as St Kilda, famed for the evacuation of its
human population, and now dominated by wild sheep and seabirds. In
this evocative and vividly observed book, Patrick Barkham explores
some of the most beautiful landscapes in the British Isles as he
travels to ever-smaller islands in search of their special magic.
Our small islands are both places of freedom and imprisonment,
party destinations and oases of peace, strangely suburban and
deeply wild. They are places where the past is unusually present,
but they can also offer a vision of an alternative future. Meeting
all kinds of islanders, from nuns to puffins, from local legends to
rare subspecies of vole, he seeks to discover what it is like to
live on a small island, and what it means to be an islander.
The British Isles are an archipelago made up of two large islands
and 6,289 smaller ones. Some, like the Isle of Man, resemble
miniature nations, with their own language and tax laws; others,
like Ray Island in Essex, are abandoned and mysterious places
haunted by myths, ghosts and foxes. There are resurgent islands
such as Eigg, which have been liberated from capricious owners to
be run by their residents; holy islands like Bardsey, the resting
place of 20,000 saints, and still a site of spiritual questing; and
deserted islands such as St Kilda, famed for the evacuation of its
human population, and now dominated by wild sheep and seabirds. In
this evocative and vividly observed book, Patrick Barkham explores
some of the most beautiful landscapes in the British Isles as he
travels to ever-smaller islands in search of their special magic.
Our small islands are both places of freedom and imprisonment,
party destinations and oases of peace, strangely suburban and
deeply wild. They are places where the past is unusually present,
but they can also offer a vision of an alternative future. Meeting
all kinds of islanders, from nuns to puffins, from local legends to
rare subspecies of vole, he seeks to discover what it is like to
live on a small island, and what it means to be an islander.
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