Galapagos Crusoes: A year alone with the birds
- BirdAnimalOrnithology
- Categories:Biological Sciences
- Language:English(Translation Services Available)
- Publication date:April,2022
- Pages:256
- Retail Price:11.99 GBP
- Size:130mm×198mm
- Page Views:57
- Words:(Unknown)
- Star Ratings:
- Text Color:(Unknown)
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Description
In 1964 the late Bryan Nelson, a zoologist, and his wife June spent a year living on two uninhabited, waterless Galapagos islands studying the three species of booby (‘we couldn’t resist also studying the great frigatebird and waved albatross, too’ says June). Bryan’s book, Galapagos: Islands of Birds was published in 1968 and, although by necessity a scientific study, his light touch and the extraordinary hardships and delights of living in total isolation with no means of rescue should things go wrong, make it an exceptionally good read. Now, nearly 60 years later, June Nelson has extracted the story of that extraordinary year and complemented it with her own recollections. The couple’s research and findings remain relevant and interesting, so plenty of wildlife descriptions are retained, but it is the mischievous mocking birds and friendly sea lions which will captivate the reader as much as the famous blue-footed boobies and waved albatrosses. At the end of their stay on Hood, when their clothes were literally in tatters and they went barefoot, they had news of the imminent visit of The Duke of Edinburgh and the Royal Yacht Britannia. June’s description of this visit and their lunch on board with Prince Philip, make a surreal ending to a year of deteriorating food: ‘Now our flour had around 50 maggots or beetles per pound… Dried beans would have three or four beetles per bean… In spaghetti a black shadow meant beetle, a grey one maggot. It took a long time, breaking out each shadow, to make a meal.’
Author
Keen outdoor, conservation and do-it-yourself folk, Bryan and June met in 1954 and almost spent their 1961 honeymoon on the Bass Rock, where they studied gannets for 3 years. With a First in Zoology and a D.Phil. from Oxford, Bryan went on, with June, to study the behaviour and ecology of seabirds in the Galapagos, Peru, Christmas Island and New Zealand. With the help of Prince Philip they persuaded Australia to help save the rare Abbott’s booby. Bryan died in 2015.
Contents
HRH The Duke of Edinburgh
Foreword to Galapagos Crusoes Tui de Roy
Preface: The evolution of this book
Acknowledgements
1. Beginnings
2. The Galapagos
3. Arrivals
4. Life on a desert island
5. Tower Island: our new home
6. Housekeeping on Tower
7. Camp followers
8. Gulls
9. The great frigatebird
10. Predators and scavengers
11. Intruders
12. Three boobies
13. Hood Island
14. The waved albatross
15. Sea lions and fur seals
16. Hood: from weevils to royals
17. Farewell Galapagos
18. Aftermath
Appendix 1. Food for one year
Appendix 2. Scientific names of Galapagos species mentioned
Select bibliography