Könyv Georgia Bird Watchig Guide PM wilson

Georgia Bird Watchig Guide

Szerző: PM wilson
Nyelv: Angol
Kötés: Puha kötésű
Elérhetőség: Várható készletfeltöltés
Küldés 13. 07. 2026
5 546 Ft
A Field Guide for Birdwatchers, Wildlife Enthusiasts & Outdoor ExplorersAsk most people where to go...

Információk a könyvről

Szerző
Nyelv
Angol
Kötés
Könyv - Puha kötésű
Kiadva
2026
oldal
132
EAN
9798186537700
Enbook ID
53208938
Súly
188
Méretek
152 x 229 x 7

Teljes leírás

A Field Guide for Birdwatchers, Wildlife Enthusiasts & Outdoor Explorers

Ask most people where to go for serious birding in the United States, and Georgia rarely makes the list. Texas, Arizona, and Florida get the attention and that's exactly what makes Georgia the kind of destination that rewards a birder willing to look past the obvious names. From the black water and cypress of the Okefenokee to the maritime forests of the barrier islands, the cove hardwoods of the Chattahoochee mountains, and the wading bird rookeries of the coastal refuges, Georgia holds a genuinely rare range of habitat within a single state's borders.

Written from years of firsthand fieldwork, this guide moves from the fundamentals through to serious trip planning. It opens with the basics of getting started and identifying birds with confidence, then works through Georgia's distinct habitats and the species that define them: backyard birds, woodland and forest species, water birds and wetland dwellers, shorebirds and coastal specialists, and birds of prey. A dedicated seasonal chapter maps out what to expect and when, from spring warbler fallouts to winter waterfowl concentrations, so you can plan trips around the moments that matter rather than guessing.

The heart of the book is a detailed destination guide to ten of Georgia's essential birding sites, including the Okefenokee National Wildlife Refuge, Jekyll Island, Cumberland Island, Harris Neck, the Chattahoochee National Forest, and Savannah National Wildlife Refuge each covered with the practical detail that actually makes a trip work: access points, entrance fees, seasonal timing, safety considerations, and the specific species each site consistently delivers. The guide closes with a chapter on conservation and responsible birding practice, reflecting a genuine respect for the habitats and species it covers.

Inside, you'll find:

Habitat-by-habitat species coverage, with scientific names throughout, spanning backyard feeders, deep forest, wetlands, coastline, and open sky

A season-by-season birding calendar for Georgia, built around real migration and breeding patterns rather than generic advice

Ten essential destinations, each with practical access, cost, timing, and safety detail drawn from repeat personal visits across every season

Guidance for birders of every experience level, from identification fundamentals to planning a genuinely productive multi-site trip

This book is intended for informational purposes, based on the author's personal experience and publicly available information at the time of writing. Conditions at refuges and parks including access points, fees, and trail availability can change, and readers planning a visit should confirm current details with the specific site before traveling.

For anyone drawn to birding, wildlife photography, or simply time outdoors with binoculars in hand, this guide offers a grounded, field-tested look at a state that has far more to offer than its reputation suggests.

Want backend keywords for this one as well, following the same approach as the South Carolina and Georgia titles?