Birding on Borrowed Time

by Phoebe Snetsinger

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The story of the woman who has seen more species of birds than any human in history. Her quest began at the age of 34, taking her to all seven continents, observing and learning as much as she could about thousands of bird species.

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3 reviews
I learned about this memoir from Koeppel's To See Every Bird on Earth: A Father, a Son, and a Lifelong Obsession. Like Koeppel's father Richard, Snetsinger dedicated herself to seeing as many new birds ("lifers" in birding nomenclature) as possible. It appears that she still holds the world record with over 8,500 species; at the time of her death in 1999, she had seen about 84% of the world's extant birds. Snetsinger began birding as an adult; aided by a "small fortune" inherited from her father, she was able to travel frequently in pursuit of new birds. A melanoma and prognosis of imminent death caused her to step up her birding, and periodic recurrences kept the heat on. Birding on Borrowed Time includes a fold-out map showing her show more extensive world travels.

Unlike Richard Koeppel's father, Snetsinger seems to have liked birds themselves, often exclaiming over their beauty, habits, habitats, and other features. At the same time, she clearly derives great pleasure from taxonomy, tracking, and later in the process, the competition to amass the largest number of sightings. In this regard, the birds are secondary to their acquisition and how it is tracked and expressed; they might as well be rocks or baseball cards. Indeed, Snetsinger devotes the bulk of more than one chapter to her development of an indexing system. If you have a profound love of office supplies and spreadsheets, you'll enjoy these chapters, as I did; otherwise, you'll probably want to skim them. Black and white illustrations and a section of color paintings by the well-regarded H. Douglas Pratt bring us back to the birds themselves when the narrative is dense with lists and descriptions of stages of developing the notations for the lists.

I'm interested in birds but not particularly acquisitive about them. I don't keep a life list, I use a pair of very cheap Bushnell 8 x 23 binoculars, and my most obsessive birding adventure was driving from Napili Bay on west Maui to Hosmer Grove on Haleakala at 5:00 AM to see 'I'iwi (Vestiaria coccinea), 'Apapane (Himatione sanguinea), and, as a bonus, a pair of Red-Billed Leiothrix (Leiothrix lutea) as the sun crested the mountain peak. None of these are rare in the Hawaiian Islands, but I hadn't seen 'I'iwi or 'Apapane on a previous trip and wanted to. Still, I understand both the attraction to birds and the delight of ticking off species in a field guide or list. Two days ago, I was excited to see three bald eagles closer to home than I've ever seen them; two were feasting on a sheep carcass, which was especially spectacular. From where I'm sitting right now, I can see 15 bird encyclopedias and field guides, some domestic and others for Asia, Europe, and Mexico. Still, I am less than a dilettante and hesitate to call myself even an amateur birder. The sort of obsessive birding Snetsinger describes leaves little room for anything else. Indeed, it threatens her marriage and causes her to miss the wedding of one of her children. Not cancer, swamped boats, earthquakes, gang rape, or broken bones stop Snetsinger from her pursuit.

Birding on Borrowed Time gives a good account of an obsession. In this way, it's a good companion to books like Fatsis's Word Freak: Heartbreak, Triumph, Genius, and Obsession in the World of Competitive Scrabble Players and Jacobs's The Know-It-All: One Man's Humble Quest to Become the Smartest Person in the World. A good companion travel narrative is Gelman's Tales of a Female Nomad: Living at Large in the World. To explore the emotional side and the effect of such obsession on one's family, read Snetsinger, then read Koeppel's rather wistful account of trying to connect with his father in To See Every Bird on Earth: A Father, a Son, and a Lifelong Obsession.
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A specialized read, and certainly for birders. It is unlikely that anyone other than a birder would stick with the listing and the clear importance placed on finding the birds. Reading the book as a story and you have the remarkable events of a lady driven to do many things others would have difficulty understanding. Difficulties with injuries on trips, medical illnesses, and a brutal assault are all part of her story. By the end you will have followed a lady on her quest to see the more different species of birds in the world than any other person.

The majority of the book is an autobiography and the last chapter is authored by her son after her death while on a birding trip.
An impressive and detailed account of one woman's decades long quest to see all the birds of the world. The perfect book to console passionate birders when it is raining and the avifauna is nowhere to be found.
½

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Author Information

1 Work 68 Members

Some Editions

Kaestner, Peter (Foreword)
Pratt, H. Douglas (Illustrator)

Classifications

Genres
Nonfiction, Science & Nature, Biography & Memoir, General Nonfiction, Travel, Sports and Leisure
DDC/MDS
598.072Natural sciences & mathematicsAnimals (Zoology)BirdsOrnithology, birdwatching and field guidesEducation, research, related topicsResearch
LCC
QL677.5 .S62ScienceZoologyZoologyChordates. VertebratesBirds

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Reviews
3
Rating
(4.14)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
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1