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Highly Recommended Birding Book-The Bluebird Effect
Watercolors, life sketches and graceful writing in a spectacular literary and artistic tribute to birds
Baby hummingbirds need to be fed every twenty minutes, from predawn darkness to bedtime. Have you ever had to do anything every twenty minutes? You turn around and it’s time to do it again.
Three nestling hummingbirds grew up and, when released, buzzed around the yard behind the only mother they knew until it was time to migrate to Central America in September. The following April, all three returned to her Ohio doorstep, strong, fit, and wild, but with their “uncommon bonds” to Julie intact..
“It often begins,” she says, “with a phone call from someone who’s found a baby bird and wants to bring it over.” Julie Zickefoose is a licensed wildlife rehabilitator who has been answering such calls since 1981.
Bluebird Hatchlings Her remarkable book, The Bluebird Effect: Uncommon Bonds with Common Birds offers an intimate look into her experiences as a wildlife rehabilitator.. But it is much more than a collection of bird stories. Each of the 25 species of birds Julie profiles is brought to vibrant, intelligent life, with a wealth of natural history and behavioral observation that only someone who’s lived with birds could supply. Delicate watercolor vignettes and deft life sketches by the author create a visual feast on every page. There is no other North American writer who combines Zickefoose’s unique skill set to produce the lavishly illustrated page-turners for which she’s become justly famous. In high demand as a speaker, the biologist, writer and painter Zickefoose has been called “the greatest triple threat in natural history since Roger Tory Peterson.”
The Bluebird Effect is about the change that’s set in motion when you drop everything to help a bird, and are in turned welcomed into its world. “I don’t consider myself an expert in bird behavior,” Zickefoose says. “I’m a faithful recorder and a good storyteller, but the birds will always be my teachers. They’re the only experts.”
Julie Zickefoose, a National Public Radio commentator and a Contributing Editor to Bird Watcher’s Digest, lives outside Marietta, Ohio. Her lucid and deeply moving writing combines a childlike sense of wonder with the seasoned wisdom of a lifelong naturalist. It’s the interaction between birds and humans that fascinates her most.. “I live for the moment when my gaze meets a bird’s—that exchange of awareness of the ‘who’ in each of us, the spark of understanding leaping from the bright bead of its eye to mine.”
Zickefoose began illustrating natural history subjects as a freshman at Harvard in 1976. After a six-year stint as a field biologist for The Nature Conservancy, she turned to freelance writing and art. Since then, her work has been featured in Bird Watcher’s Digest, on NPR’s All Things Considered, and her book of illustrated essays Letters from Eden: A Year at Home, In the Woods. Her web site, www.juliezickefoose.com, has galleries of her art, writing selections, and a popular blog rife with her photography, paintings and direct observations of nature. http://juliezickefoose.blogspot.com
She and her husband Bill Thompson III, editor of Bird Watcher’s Digest, live with their two children on 80 acres in Washington County in a house with extensive gardens, an art studio and a 42-foot bird-watching tower. 185 species of birds and 78 butterfly species have graced their sanctuary to date.
The Bluebird Effect:
Uncommon Bonds with Common Birds
Julie ZickefooseList $28..00
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin
ISBN: 978-0-547-00309-2
Format: Hardcover, 8.5 X 8.5, 384 pp, 320 illustrations, most in full color
Official Publication Date: March 20, 2012
Category: Natural HistoryAvailable wherever books are sold. For more information visit www.juliezickefoose.com
Each of the twenty-five chapters covers her experiences with a different bird species, delving into its individual natural history, quirks and, for lack of a better word, “personality.” Nearly every page showcases Zickefoose’s stunning watercolor paintings and pencil drawings. Her unique talent is synthesis: tying her observations of birds into a larger context and meaning; revealing what is astonishing about events many might not even notice.
The Bluebird Effect is about what happens when, by virtue of raising it when it’s orphaned or helping it when it’s hurt, one is taken into the confidence of a wild bird. It’s about the unexpected mental and emotional capacities of birds, especially songbirds, which we tend to vastly underestimate. Everyone knows that crows and parrots are intelligent, but have you ever thought about the minds of hummingbirds? Julie Zickefoose has a unique perspective, having been mother to six. And multiple chimney swifts, cedar waxwings, mourning doves, cardinals and rose-breasted grosbeaks, to name a few. Join her for an intimate, eye-opening look at the rich mental and emotional landscape of birds.
What People Are SayingOprah’s Book Club “Book of the Week”
“We’ve been knocked to our knees by the illustrated essay collection, The Bluebird Effect… She not only endows each bird with human-like personality traits, enough… to bond you with her feathered companions, but also offers up some thoughtful commentary on our human inner lives, such as (her thoughts) while (rescuing) a family of swallows from a rat snake: ‘I’ve never much liked catching large snakes over my head while standing on a ladder. Maybe there’s a word for that little cluster of phobias. Stepnophidiophobia works; I just coined it. If what one is frightened of is truly, ridiculously scary, is it fair to call one’s fear a phobia?’…One doesn’t have to care all that much about birds to get sucked into her dreamy illustrated stories…”
– Oprah.com April 3-6, 2012“Birders will appreciate her meticulous observations and devotion to the avian world, but anyone who’s ever considered hanging a birdfeeder is likely to be mesmerized by the sensuous, precise prose as well as Zickefoose’s vivid portraits of scrawny, fluffy phoebe chicks, a self-possessed hummingbird perched on a clothesline, dwarfed by the surrounding clothespins, and orioles migrating by moonlight. Readers will be astounded by the drama and intelligence fluttering in their backyards.”
–Publishers Weekly“Beguiling stories from a naturalist’s life with backyard birds…Describing her songbirds with a delicacy of words and brush strokes, Zickefoose makes learning about birds seem like the adventure of a lifetime. A wonderful treat for birders.”
–Kirkus (The World’s Toughest Book Critics)“A wonderful amalgam of nature writing and memoir…This lovely book is one to savor slowly, admiring both writing and artistry.”
–Booklist, starred review -
try a deck-mount birdbath for smaller spaces
Think there’s no room on your deck for a cool birdbath? Think again!
You can create a dramatic and unique focal point with a deck-mounted birdbath. This handcrafted birdbath with an aged copper-patina finish is just plain cool. The organic form and textured detail promises to enhance any setting while attracting avian amigos!
The texture is a plus for birds as it allows them better footing than most slick surfaces. Its sloped sides also facilitate a “walk-in” approach for smaller songbirds and juveniles. Complete with wrought iron deck clamp, installation takes just a few seconds, and the clamp-on design means no holes in the deck rail too.
Fresh water in a birdbath really is the best way to entice more wild birds to your place, and with the rising cost of seed… that’s a good thing! The other advantage, is that you can switch out bowls for freezing winter months and create a new feeding station with the same close-up views of your birds. Take an inexpensive plastic plant saucer, drill a few drainage holes, and you’ve got a winter bird feeder that allows for feeding a variety of treats.
No yard or small yard? This season, try a deck-mounted birdbath, then sit back and enjoy the show!
- Bath Heaters & Deicers, Bird Accessories, Bird Bath, Bird Baths, Birding Accessories, Heated Bird Bath, Misters and Birdbath Drippers, Uncategorized, Water Wiggler
From heated bird baths to moving water in a snap!
It really doesn’t take a bird bath to make a bird bath! Does that make sense? Years ago, this cool rock-like, poly-resin planter caught my eye. Because of the shallow depth, the perfect birdbath set on a tree stump came to mind.
During winter months, this portable bath heater is added quickly and easily, creating one of several heated bird baths in the yard, and the birds use them all!
Today, with the warm sunny weather, and extended forecast for warmer than average temps, the heaters were removed (just as easily) cleaned up, and put in storage for next winter. Out came the water wigglers and bath drippers, which will be in constant use for about, oh, the next eight months or so. Yeah!!
If the birds liked the heated bird baths… they go absolutely bonkers for these fab bird bath accessories! Because moving water is where it’s at as far as birds are concerned. Both resident and migratory birds are attracted to moving water. I like it because bird baths stay cleaner longer, and knowing that mosquitoes can not lay their eggs in my baths is a good thing. Due of the mild winter, it’s going to be a buggy-enough season as it is, and having birds (and bats) around will greatly reduce insect populations the natural way.
If you’re hesitant about having a bird bath with standing water in your yard, you can easily remedy the situation by adding water wigglers, bath drippers or misters to keep water moving and fresher. And, it doesn’t even take a traditional type birdbath, as a deep plant saucer, or shallow dish makes the perfect bath! Two to three inches is the optimal depth. Anything deeper, should have a large rock in the center to serve as a landing spot or perch. With fresh water in the yard (especially moving water), you’ll entice more species of birds, even those who may not visit your feeders.