DAILY PHOTO: Lilac-Breasted Roller

Taken in April of 2017 in Botswana

 


DAILY PHOTO: Sunset over the Chobe River

Taken in April of 2017 in Chobe National Park (i.e. taken from Botswana looking into Namibia)

DAILY PHOTO: Scenes from the David Scott Trail

Taken in Meghalaya in April of 2017

DAILY PHOTO: Tree on a Cliff

Taken in June of 2015 along the Tirthan-Sainj trek route in Himachal Pradesh

 

DAILY PHOTO: Out on a Limb

Taken in April of 2017 from the Chobe River on the Botswanan side

 

I believe this is an African Water Monitor, but I’m a neophyte naturalist.

DAILY PHOTO: Urchins

Taken on December of 2017 in San Juan, Siquijor Island

 

Panagsama Beach near Moalboal, Cebu Island

 

Panagsama Beach near Moalboal, Cebu Island

DAILY PHOTO: Butterflies of Bohol

Taken in December of 2017 on Bohol Island in the Philippines

 

BOOK REVIEW: The Forest Unseen by David George Haskell

The Forest Unseen: A Year's Watch in NatureThe Forest Unseen: A Year’s Watch in Nature by David George Haskell
My rating: 5 of 5 stars

Amazon page

 

The premise of this book is simple but the result is fascinating. The author, a naturalist, picks a small patch of old-growth forest in Tennessee and visits it three or four times per month over the course of a year. He then writes an essay on something that he observed in (on, above, below, etc.) that patch that he calls “the mandala.” (FYI- A mandala is a symbolic representation of the universe, or an aspect thereof, that some Eastern religions use for meditative purposes.) While botany and zoology form the heart of Haskell’s subject matter, the subjects vary and include geology, behavior (animal and human), light, medicinal use of plants, and more.

Using a full year as his scope, Haskell catches some of the rare and ephemeral forest happenings. He drills down and offers the reader insight into what is happening beneath the bark and fallen leaves, providing background and context through his research that supplements his observations. In some of the articles we learn how the mandala may have changed over the centuries. In others we learn about happenings at scales too small for us to observe directly.

Haskell’s descriptions are often beautiful and always necessary as he conveys all through words. There are no graphics, and so the reader benefits from vivid descriptions. The chapters / essays stand alone nicely, so one doesn’t have to read the book straight through, but can rather pick the book up once in a while over an extended time — as it was written. Reading this book over the course of a year wouldn’t be a bad way to go about it, particularly if one lives in an ecosystem similarly forested.

There is a bibliography, but that’s about the extent of ancillary matter. It’s a simple book and that sparseness resonates well with the book’s theme and style.

I enjoyed this book and think nature lovers will find it intriguing and enjoyable.

View all my reviews

DAILY PHOTO: Mountain Creek

Taken in August of 2016 in Kashmir

DAILY PHOTO: Mountain & Lake in Kashmir

Taken in August of 2016 on the trail from Naranag to Sonamarg