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07.09.2008 4:13 pm
Book idea for St. Louis writers
Jane Henderson
Post-Dispatch Book Editor

The other day I was driving down a leafy neighborhood street just off of South Grand Boulevard and I saw a falcon sitting on a fire hydrant.

It still is a thrill for me to spot birds of prey in the wild, let alone the city of St. Louis. This falcon (at least that is what I think it was - it looked like the bird on the cover of the classic “My Side of the Mountain” by Jean Craighead George) was eating a mouse it had caught.

Since the handsome bird was virtually eye-level. I stopped the car so my daughter could see it too. I even backed up and we watched it for a few minutes.

We weren’t on a mountain or in the wilderness. Just in a minivan on an attractive city street looking at a bird on a fire hydrant. It was, if not magical, at least memorable.

Then I came across a review in the New York Times of a new book about urban wildlife.

What a lot of work, to study urban wildlife for a long-enough time to make a truly interesting, nonfiction story about them. But I thought it would be a fascinating book for St. Louis, too. Many bird watchers go to Tower Grove Park and Forest Park. Add that topic to my list of books I’d be interested in reading.

Any one else want to share their ideas of what stories could be repeated/adapted or whatever for a St. Louis audience?

Here’s the beginning of the Times review:

By MICHIKO KAKUTANI

c.2008 New York Times News Service

In her charming 1998 book, “Red-Tails in Love,” Marie Winn chronicled the story of Pale Male, a red-tailed hawk who made his home in the heart of New York City, romancing a series of mates over the years and siring nearly two dozen offspring from a nest high on the 12th-floor facade of a fancy Fifth Avenue apartment building — a story that would gain worldwide attention in 2004 when the residents of that Fifth Avenue co-op had the nest removed, provoking an outcry from bird lovers and even some hard-core, bird-agnostic New Yorkers.
In “Red-Tails in Love” Winn also gave us some enchanting glimpses of Central Park as the place where the wild things are, and her new book, “Central Park in the Dark: More Mysteries of Urban Wildlife,” is very much a companion volume to that earlier account. In these pages she gives us a delightful chronicle of the animals that come out to hunt and play in the park at night, while providing, in her operatic account of the ups and downs of a group of screech owls, a gripping narrative that rivals that of Pale Male and his mates.
Winn, a former nature columnist for The Wall Street Journal, is not only highly knowledgeable about the park and its many inhabitants, but she is also able to communicate her passion for this patch of urban wilderness with grace, humor and elan. She gives us affectionate portraits of the other wildlife aficionados who share her willingness to brave rain, snow, cold and dark to observe the park’s nocturnal critters.

At the same time, she conveys the magic and enduring mysteries of Central Park, a place, as she noted in her earlier book, that was created “as an improvement on the wild” where “city dwellers could come and enjoy the illusion of wilderness without any of its inconveniences or dangers” but that through nature’s alchemy has begun to turn from facsimile into the real thing.

Here, in an oasis of green sandwiched between apartment buildings of steel and concrete, live raccoons, squirrels, woodchucks, frogs, butterflies, mice, rats, bats, catfish, bass, carp, Canada geese, mallards, woodpeckers, vultures, kestrels, hawks and owls: a free-range menagerie rivaling the captive collection at the Central Park Zoo. Here, former pets — goldfish, turtles and rabbits, abandoned by their owners — have made new lives for themselves. Here, some 275 bird species have garnered the park accolades as one of the nation’s top birding sites, right up there with Yosemite and the Everglades.

Here, on the north side of the Great Lawn, Winn tells us, is a tree where hundreds of robins, mainly males in need of a bachelor pad while their mates sit on their eggs at home, gather to spend the night. Here, on the East Drive, a little south of the Boathouse Restaurant, is what Winn and her friends call the Moth Tree, a tree that used to ooze sap that attracted an astonishing variety of moths. (More recently, she reports, the ailing tree recovered, stopped leaking sap and hence became less of a moth magnet.)

The one problem with “Central Park in the Dark” is that Winn rarely records the year something happened, only the day and month, arguing that “exact dates aren’t particularly significant in natural history,” an observation that, even if true, still makes for irritation on the part of the lay reader. A smaller quibble is that she has also elected not to provide any pictures of the many species of birds, animals and insects that she discusses in these pages, even though she points out that she took hundreds of photographs that “helped me get the details right.”

So what exactly did Winn and her fellow night stalkers find in Central Park in the dark? They found more than 100 species of moths. They observed the weirdly complex and (to some) exuberant spectacle of slug sex. They witnessed the last stage of cicada metamorphosis, by which the dull, brown nymph is transformed into a gauzy green creature of fairy-tale beauty. They experienced the “quasi-religious exhilaration” of seeing owls make their evening fly-outs to hunt for food. And they used bat detectors — devices that translate “ultrasonic bat songs into frequencies people can hear” — to look for bats in the Ramble and the North Woods.

To find this review, you will have to register with the nytimes.com and go to books. I’m not sure whether it’s still available for free. jh


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