Available Formats
Black Ops and Beaver Bombing: Adventures with Britain's Wild Mammals
By (Author) Fiona Mathews
By (author) Tim Kendall
Oneworld Publications
Oneworld Publications
3rd September 2024
2nd May 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Travel writing
Wildlife: mammals: general interest
599.0941
Paperback
368
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 27mm
Countryfile's best nature and wildlife books for 2023 'Elegiac, informative and funny; some truly magical encounters in the wild' Peter Fiennes Britain is teeming with wildlife, often in the most unexpected places. There are stone mines where bats hang out with pot-smoking teenagers and water voles thrive without water in Glaswegian parklands. Our coastlines are laden with seals. Thats the good news. The bad news is that a quarter of British mammals are at imminent risk of extinction. Tim Kendall and Fiona Mathews take us on a safari unlike any other. Armed with binoculars, a Thermos and, regrettably, an inexhaustible supply of puns, they travel from Scotland to the Isles of Scilly in search of their elusive subjects. Youll find answers to questions you never thought to ask: do pine marten droppings really smell like Parma Violets Should we give squirrels access to family planning And what do wild boar have in common with a certain royal Black Ops and Beaver Bombing is a celebration of Britains marvellous mammals, and a rallying cry to save them.
Spring has barely ticked over into summer, but Ive already found the book that Ill be recommending for the rest of the year.
-- BBC Countryfile Magazine'If you care about Britains beautiful mammals which of course you do this hilarious book is a must-read.Weasely my favourite book of the year so far.'
-- Dave Goulson, author of Silent Earth'A cracking book, which shares fascinating stories from the new frontlines of nature conservation...readable and entertaining.The passion and humour of the authors comes through on every page.'
-- Craig Bennett, Chief Executive of The Wildlife Trusts'Engaging, humorous and full of fascinating facts you probably never knew,Black Ops and Beaver Bombingcelebrates, mourns and champions the wonderful variety of British mammals.'
-- Waterstones, Best Books of 2023'You will laugh and learn in equal measure.
* BBC Wildlife Magazine *Delightful The authors sadness is clear, yet the text is more readable because they dont take themselves too seriously, and scatter the text with memorable details.
-- Irish TimesEverything you could hope for in a book about our beleaguered native mammals. Elegiac, informative and funny; some truly magical encounters in the wild; an almost baffled indignation at our institutional and collective failures of policy and imagination; and best of all some actual solutions.
-- Peter Fiennes, author of Oak and Ash and Thorn'Packed full of useful information and acutely up to date As she's one of the ablest mammalogists of our age, it's well worth listening to Fiona Mathews. I would heartily recommend this book to all.'
-- Derek Gow, author of Bringing Back the BeaverThis book is, or should be, a big wake-up call to anyone who hasnt already realised that Britains native mammals are in trouble Black Ops and Beaver Bombing provides an entertaining and informative look at some of our native mammalian species as well as the wider issues associated with species conservation in Britain. It should be required reading for anyone with a passing interest in our native wild mammals as well as for those who would like to do more to help with conservation. I particularly hope that it will be read by the politicians and other people who are in a position to make positive changes to reverse the decline of our native mammals.'
-- GreenSpirit MagazineFiona Mathews is professor at the University of Sussex, founding chair of Mammal Conservation Europe, and author of the governments official census of British mammals. Tim Kendall has been an obsessive mammal-spotter all his life and teaches poetry to ill-fated undergraduates. When theyre not co-writing a book, Fiona and Tim put their marriage to the test by hurtling up and down the country on wild mammal chases.