Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Antonia Malchik's avatar

I walked away from my Master Naturalist course with several pounds worth of new field guides. It was so much fun using them in the field! Especially for plants. I’ve been trying to figure out how to make them practical in the backcountry. (They aren’t, there’s just no way. You either accept carrying those extra pounds or you don’t.) I’ve found both Merlin and iNaturalist--thanks to your introduction for that one!--to be wonderful assists for learning. I don’t always use them, but sometimes I’ll go between them and a field guide, and especially for birds it’s really helpful. I like the way you relate it to learning languages. When I’m learning a language, I use recordings (CDs and tapes once, online now) to try to figure out pronunciation, unless I’m doing immersion, but that doesn’t replace the rest of the text studying, just enriches it.

Expand full comment
Pamela Leavey's avatar

No sign of snowy owls or snow goose down here. I have a collection of my mothers wildflower books that served me well for years. Books are so much better than phone apps.

Expand full comment
68 more comments...

No posts