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G**E
A modern site guide that has been put together beautifully
You have to be quite brave to undertake a site guide to a sprawling country like India with a wide latitudinal range encompassing a broad range of habitats and significant travel times due to difficult terrain and poor roads. Reducing it to 100 sites may make the task more manageable but it is clear from the information brought together into this book that it still has been an enormous task.In 1998 Krys Kazmierczak and Raj Singh authored ‘A Birdwatchers' Guide to India’. The 334 page book was a major compilation of Indian birding sites and was a landmark publication. It was published at a time when full colour was too expensive and the bulk of the book was without colour. It was aimed at the kind of birders who were prepared to endure the hardships of public transport and budget accommodation.This new book does not compromise on the practical details of logistics or target species or which trails and localities a birder should focus on, but it is an altogether different offering combining the look and feel of a posh coffee table book with a compact shape and size so that it can still fit into a day pack or backpack. Overall impressions of this book are very favourable with very good design and structure. The images are absolutely stunning. Nearly 70 photographers, the significant majority who are Indians have contributed images. Nationals of countries like India, Malaysia and Sri Lanka have inherited a great love of natural history and birds through the historical legacy of being former British colonies. Today, this historical influence together with an affluent and growing middle class has manifested itself in an explosion of bird photographers who are armed with an armoury of long lenses. As someone who has written and photographed for a site guide, I know only too well that the real drawback in preparing a site guide is to find images that show the sites. Wildlife photographers don’t like to be saddled with two camera bodies around their neck and usually landscape images are sacrificed in favour of the long lens work or macro lens work. However, in this book an effort has been made to include images that show the site to help visualise what a visitor can expect. Some of the site accounts may only have one location image, but a good number do have two images. I personally would have liked to have seen more images of the sites, but for a given page count and shape of book, this may have required reducing the size of images or having fewer stunning images of birds.The sites are arranged by state with typically a double page spread that introduces the state with a map with the sites marked on it. For each state there are sections on Climate, Access, Transportation & Logistics, Health & Safety. Because of domestic and international politics with neighbouring countries, and India having a federal approach to government, each state does need such a section as India is a complex country. In the double page spreads introducing the state, Birders would obviously be drawn to the Top 10 Birds for the state and the section on Birdwatching Highlights. The last section also covers additional information on local birding groups. The individual sites have a tall text box for Key Facts which covers key species, habitats and important logistics such as the best time to visit and orientation information with a local map of the site and details of the nearest major towns. The local map is simple and high level, adequate for general orientation. It is not a detailed site map. The main text covers the Bird Watching Sites, Access & Accommodation’ and Conservation. One omission is that the front sections lack a supplementary list detailing the sites covered within each state or an alphabetical index of just the sites covered.I have visited India a few times and I read through the accounts of sites I have visited from Kerala in the South to Uttar Pradesh in the North. I was impressed with the detail that has been packed within what is typically two pages per site. The front section covers climate, geography and habitats and the end sections include a complete checklist of the birds. In the 100 sites, well known tiger reserves, such as Ranthambore, Bandhavghar and Corbett are included as expected. But there are also some other reserves such as Balpakram National Park in Meghalya and Intanki National Park in Nagaland which remind us that India has so many exciting sites to be explored. If you are not an adventurous birder and visiting the main tourist trail or coming on business, there are plenty of sites which are fantastic for birding. Okhla Bird Sanctuary is just 10km from Delhi’s financial centre. In Kerala which has good tourism infrastructure, are many sites such as Thattekad which is considered the best birding hotspot in peninsular India.This is a much needed, up-to-date and beautifully presented modern birdwatching site guide to India. A book like this vets the appetite of wildlife travellers from around the world to visit India. It reinforces how much of the destination publicity for a country is undertaken by birders working with international publishers.
V**S
Nicely put together book but too many photographs and not enough maps
Nicely put together book which gives you a good background into the best birdwatching stes in the country. It has far too many photographs however, some of which are nice but others are a waste of space as most people travelling to the country would probably already know what a Common Pochard, Gadwall or Common Snipe looks like! This space could have been used to include detailed site maps of which there are none. I have many site guides and most of them include the walking paths and best areas to look for specialist birds.
G**O
Beautiful book, but...
Positives: many sumptuous, beautiful photographs; good site descriptions and informationNegatives: site maps are less than useless; too many mis-captioned photos (e.g. page 57, 85, 89...)
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