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[pct-l] PCT's birds and other critters]
- Subject: [pct-l] PCT's birds and other critters]
- From: ftclp at uaf.edu (Christin L. Pruett)
- Date: Thu Feb 10 14:37:03 2005
Aloha Jean, are you really in Hawaii or do you just want to make me feel
bad freezing my rear off in the frosty north?
I did the painful thing you mentioned. I bought a new Sibley guide to the
birds of the west (might have been for all of North America?) and cut it
up into sections. The reason I chose sibley was that it had all of the
info on a single page - bird picture, map, some info about habitat etc...
I normally use a National Geographic guide but it has this info on 2 pages
and thus more weight. I think my total weight was about 6 oz plus the
binocs which were 8 oz. As I went along I bounced the cards that had
birds that I was less likely to see (desert endemics) or learned how to
identify. I also tried hard to learn the birds before I went. I already
knew most of the stuff from so. cal because I'd been birding there before
but there were still some hard ones that I kept the guide for the whole
trip such as empidonax flycatchers - which I still had a very hard time
iding. Maybe someone will come up with a newer guide that is lighter but
I doubt it as most people who buy those guides are not going backpacking.
Too bad because backpacking and birding are a natural fit.
Christy
> Did you take a field guide with you? I usually hike with a field guide
but I expect to be a little more conscious of my pack weight when I make
it out onto the PCT (hopefully in '06) and have been looking for a book or
more than one that is smalier than my usual guide but is still
useful. I considered buying a new general guide and chopping it up (take
out the sea birds, etc) but it seems like there's gotta be a better
answer. If you are aware of any good one's I'd sure appreciate a tip.
> aloha,
> Jean