About This Book
A series of lyrical natural-history essays set in the Hampshire heathland and New Forest, recording seasonal observations of birds, mammals, insects, and plants, with detailed accounts of behaviors such as nesting, feeding, drumming, and alarm cries. The narrator intersperses field anecdotes about cuckoos, nightjars, adders, beetles, and ants with close sensory description of light, scent, and landscape. Short, reflective passages consider instinct, mortality, pain, and the effects of human presence and changing rural practices, producing a compassionate, attentive portrait of local ecology and the rhythms of life and death across the year.
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