Not a bird book, but our young grandchildren have learned backyard birds from
the beautiful posters at Backyard Bird Shops in the Portland area.
Sometimes we look up a bird of interest on You Tube.
—Jeanne Myhre
On Oct 21, 2021, at 2:46 PM, Alan Contreras <acontrer56@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Arthur Ransome’s “Coot Club” is British and maybe 90 years old now so some of
the language is a little different, but it has quite a few birds in it and
the story (young adult, but I still read it) is rooted in attempts to protect
birds.
Ransome’s “Great Northern?” is even more bird-centric, about children who
discover a loon’s nest in Scotland and a wicked egg collector who tries to
collect the nest.
Alan Contreras
Eugene, Oregon
acontrer56@xxxxxxxxx
www.alanlcontreras.com
I will not have phone or internet service October 28-November 8. Messages
received during this period will be dealt with after November 9.
On Oct 21, 2021, at 2:34 PM, Nelson, Kim <kim.nelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
Bill et al.,
Here are a few more good books for children about real birds. Not sure they
are all perfect for toddlers but they would at least enjoy the
pictures/drawings.
Seabird in the Forest by Joan Dunning
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/11022204-seabird-in-the-forest
The Loon: Voice of the Wilderness also by Joan Dunning
https://www.goodreads.com/en/book/show/1438774.The_Loon
Owl Moon by Jane Yolan (won the Caldecott Medal)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/228696.Owl_Moon
Falcons in the City by Lisa Manning (lives in Portland)
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/18085316-falcons-in-the-city?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=lFIf14Te9z&rank=2
Ruby’s Birds by Mya Thompson
https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/42049760-ruby-s-birds?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=2oU10JFE93&rank=1
S. Kim Nelson
Courtesy Faculty
Oregon State University
Department of Fisheries, Wildlife, and Conservation Sciences
104 Nash Hall
Corvallis, OR 97331
kim.nelson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
https://www.oregonmurrelet.org/
From: obol-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <obol-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> On Behalf Of
Stephen T Bird
Sent: Thursday, October 21, 2021 8:44 AM
To: kfhussey@xxxxxxxxx
Cc: Bill Bradford <billbradford1@xxxxxxxxx>; Oregon Birders OnLine
<obol@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>; clearwater@xxxxxxxx
Subject: [obol] Re: Requesting bird info for toddlers
[This email originated from outside of OSU. Use caution with links and
attachments.]
Not exactly just birds, but nature and words: Robert MacFarlane’s “Lost
Words” and “Lost Spells”.
I long misunderstood something Richard Feynman said about birds, that took
me until my adult life to understand: names aren’t important, understanding
place and behavior is (the role they’re playing)*. Molly Hoshimotos book is
great for teaching that (seasons). In addition, Sibleys guide to Birds and
Behavior is good for the next age up of grandchildren.
Looking forward to others recommendations,
Stephen
*I’d make the additional point that names are important in ecology/biology.
Getting roles first gets you the averages, but what is interesting in
biology is not averages but variation. “Names” give you the vocabulary to
see variation.
On Wed, Oct 20, 2021 at 8:23 PM Karen Hussey <kfhussey@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
My young toddler really likes Molly Hashimoto’s Birds! : Season by Season
Molly is a well known Washington artist and text is from Zoe Burk. It’s a
short and sweet rhyming board book that introduces different species
throughout the seasons. He started enjoying it before he was 1 and at almost
2 can identify all the species.
The duo also have a nice similar board book about trees.
https://www.thriftbooks.com/w/molly-hashimotos-birds-season-by-season_zoe-burke/18918655/item/28903529/?gclid=EAIaIQobChMIhJiczMPa8wIVdRh9Ch2MRwUQEAQYBCABEgJS5fD_BwE#idiq=28903529&edition=20166785
Karen
On Oct 20, 2021, at 7:31 PM, Joel Geier <clearwater@xxxxxxxx> wrote:
Hi Bill and all,
One of the ones we loved when our kids were young was "Flute's Journey," by
Lynne Cherry. It describes the journey of a Wood Thrush, and the art is
amazing.
Our oldest loved it so much when we had it checked out from the library,
that he pulled it around in his little red wagon, and then it got rained on,
and then we had to buy a new copy for the library ... but we managed to
salvage the original book by drying out the pages, and we still have it.
Another favorite was "The Big Snow" by Berta and Elmer Hader, which won the
Caldecott Medal way back in 1949.
Happy reading!
Joel
From: Bill Bradford <billbradford1@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wed, 20 Oct 2021 18:00:29 -0700
Subject: [obol] Requesting bird info for toddlers
can you respond to a question I received from my friend, Buzz:
"My grandson is avid for more detailed information about real birds, not
‘storybook characters’.
Any recommendations for lavishly illustrated read aloud books?
Very curious about pelicans, fairy terns, cuckoos, egrets, tailorbirds, and
owls."
You can just write to me and I'll forward responses to Buzz.
Thanks.
Bill Bradford
billbradford1@xxxxxxxxx