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2000

6 x 9 in.
280 pp., 19 halftones, 1 map, 3 tables

ISBN: 978-0-292-70499-2
$25.00, paperback
Print-on-demand title; expedited shipping not available
33% website discount: $16.75

This book is a digital facsimile of the 2000 edition.

 
 
 
     

Wildlife Sanctuaries and the Audubon Society
Places to Hide and Seek

By John M. "Frosty" Anderson
Foreword by Donal C. O'Brien, Jr.

 

Table of Contents and Excerpt

available through netLibrary

 

"John M. 'Frosty' Anderson is one of the National Audubon Society's great 'living legends.'... No one has done more for wildlife than this modest man with the best sense of humor ever to come down the pike."

—from the Foreword

National Audubon Society sanctuaries across the United States preserve the unique combinations of plants, climates, soils, and water that endangered birds and other animals require to survive. Their success stories include the recovery of the common and snowy egrets, wood storks, Everglade kites, puffins, and sandhill cranes, to name only a few.

In this book, Frosty Anderson describes the development of fifteen NAS sanctuaries from Maine to California and from the Texas coast to North Dakota. Drawn from the newsletter "Places to Hide and Seek," which he edited during his tenure as Director/Vice President of the Wildlife Sanctuary Department of the NAS, these profiles offer a personal, often humorous look at the daily and longer-term activities involved in protecting bird habitats. Collectively, they record an era in conservation history in which ordinary people, without benefit of Ph.Ds, became stewards of the habitats in which they had lived all their lives. It's a story worth preserving, and it's entertainingly told here by the man who knows it best.

The late John M. "Frosty" Anderson retired from the National Audubon Society in 1987, after a twenty-one-year career.



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