The Birds of Ecuador: Field Guide
A**G
BIG Field Guide! How I seperated out the picture plates
A great, thorough book on the birds of Ecuador. But as others have posted TOO BIG to take out into the field! I read other reviews on how they separated the plates from the text, some with mixed results. There were no places where I live that would take the book apart and put it back together, so I thought I would give it a try.Here is what I did- Pic 1 try to bend back the book at the bond edge as much as you can to separate the text from the plates. Slowly cut it apart with an xacto knife or something similar LEAVING the bound glued edge together for each section! I purchased from Amazon some 2" black premium-cloth book binding repair tape to use. I had an old plastic 3-ring binder laying around, so I cut 2 pieces to use as a cover for the plates. I also added one piece of white card-stock to the front and back of the plates next to the cover. The tape is quite sticky so you need to be careful with it- added it to one cover, then wrapped it around the plate pages and the back cover. Need to rub/press on well! (pic 2) Pic 3 shows what it looks like on the inside of the cover and card-stock meet. I suppose you could always add a piece of tape along the seam there too if you want, but the tape is holding it quite well.) Plate 4 shows a page toward the back where some of the strings were cut a bit when I cut the book apart. Where the arrows are (just as an example) shows all the holes where the threads are. I put drops of white glue in each of the holes all the way up and down the page to secure it and then left the book open for the glue to dry. If there are any other pages that have pulled apart a bit, also secure them with a thin line of white glue (but make sure you don't glue any shut or over the birds!) I believe this is probably one of the best ways to do this. If you add any sort of wire binding will mess up the plates - the birds are so crammed in on a page (Definitely one of my DISLIKES of this book!) and so close to the edges, birds would be covered up!Pic 5 shows how I taped the two parts of the text together. IF you buy wider tape, you can probably get away with one piece (but I find narrower tape easier to work with) So I ended up using 3 lengths of tape- first one down the center and then 2 others from the center of the book over the edges of the cover. Again press down well! After using it a while, I did cut a 1" wide length of tape and put It inside the book where the 2 sections met to secure the pages a bit more. I've been handling my books for the last 2 months daily, to study and to write in notes and so far, so good with no problem of them falling apart. I will see in a few weeks how it holds up in Ecuador! I hope this helps others to be able to tackle this on their own! Thanks to the others whose reviews I gleaned on how to tackle this!I really hope that someday the publishers would make this a two volume set! I would gladly have paid a bit more to have the plates seperate to take out in the field.
J**R
Heavy guide.
While it is nice having the illustrations in a compact section of the book, having to turn to a different section of the book for the written description is a pain. Good for study at home, but too heavy to carry in the field.
R**R
Useful but too bulky
Actually, this is volume 2 of a set of two books. But it is this volume that is meant to be taken to the field. For the first time, there is a full set of very useful color plates for one of the core South American countries. It is certainly a great accomplishment to have all the species pictured in color and on a more or less consistent standard. However, I do not agree with other reviewers who rave about the plates. Too many of the bird pictures have an overall flat appearance, with the color rendition being too simplistic or too bold. And while a good number of the birds are depicted in good or even in unnecessarily large size, others would have benefitted from a larger sized rendition. Just because a species is small does not mean it has to be depicted in a diminutive size, unless there are larger species of the same group on the plate. Thus, while the plates are most useful, it is nevertheless disappointing to see that the overall standard (except for the plates being all in color) is rather lower than what was already published decades ago e.g. in "Birds of Colombia".The book has excellent range maps and very helpful comprehensive texts. However, a somewhat more compact layout would have allowed for a smaller overall size of the book. The way to do it is being demonstrated in the book itself. The texts facing the plates use the suggested compact layout most convincingly. Spanish bird names are given in the main text, but, unfortunately, there is no index for them.(This is an adapted review I originally published in 2002 for the so-called slipcased two-volume edition. As it concerned the fieldguide, but disappeared, here it is again.)
C**N
Here they are
This book is described as a field guide, but it is rather large and heavy for that. A friend who has traveled often to pursue the sight of the birds of the world gave me this advice: Take the book to Kinkos, or some such place, and have the center removed and bound. This book is suitable for that. All the color plates are in the center; a page of descriptions is opposite each plate. Of course when you return from your trip you can keep the two together with no more inconvenience than one has anyway with a bird book which has all the plates in the middle.The rest of the book consists of more extensive descriptions of each bird and has a map for each, giving its range. This book is intended to be only half of a two volume set, the other volume being -- I don't know what, since I don't have it -- but of interest only to the most serious ornithologist who might be spending a long time in Ecuador.
O**S
I wanted to give it a 5, but it doesn't come with scissors.
I hate to hack appart this wonderful book, but it is a must. In reality this should be a three volume book. The field guide should look more like a peterson guide. Keep the plates and give me some small range maps in the back.That being said even after hacking it into two parts, it is worth the money. The illustrations and descriptions are accurate and aside from modifying the format there is nothing I would change about it except the much needed addition of an index for the plates would have been helpful. I added my own. Otherwise you have to flip through the bird families; this is time consuming.It is very helpful that there is a map in the very beginning with notable locations and the opposite page has them numbered in the key.Again do not worry about modifying this book in anyway. Hell, I hope to come across someone in my travels who took the time to organize the range maps and put them all right after the plates. I will be impressed. So, just keep half with you in the field and half at your lodgings. You won't be the only one walking around around Ecuador with a glued, stapled, or taped up version of this guide sticking out of your vest pocket. Just give your fellow travelers a nod.
S**N
ANOTHER TWO KILO BRICK FIELD GUIDE
The art work is good and the text is very good the only problem is the size and weight. Like all amazonian country's they are blessed with too many birds, in Ecuador's they have nearly two thousand species. Which makes making a field guild which would be easy to carry around in the field awkward. I wish company's like Helm would make each country's birds with the artwork and some brief Tex all in one book, and if you wanted more Tex that could be put in a separate book, a book that covers the whole continent. Lets face it if you were looking for a book to take on holiday with you and when you see the size of this book you will probably put it back on the shelf. I nearly did
R**S
Never mind the weight!
This is a first class field guide with excellent colour plates. I would have given it a max of 5 stars but for its weight - about 2 kilos! To travel with that in your day sack is asking a bit much. Having said that it is very good value and worth it just for the plates. For the first time ever I have cut the binding and rebound it as two volumes - the plates and the narrative. I'll be taking the plates with me but will leave the narrative behind to use as a reference. This is still the definitive field guide to the birds of Ecuador.
K**R
Very useful guide, the birds are all so different over ...
Very useful guide, the birds are all so different over there. However this really helped me find what I had seen.Have operate pages for descriptions, locations and drawings which makes rather more difficult!
S**K
Too big to be a field guide and soon to be superseded
Until the (delayed) new Restall field guide comes out this remains the standard work on Ecuador. But it isn't a field guide unless you have a massive pocket and want to risk a hernia.
S**R
The best Comprehensive Guide
This must be one of the best bird books ever produced.If going to Ecuador ,this is invaluable.It is a little bulky for a field guide but it is packed from cover to cover with invaluable information.A must buy for any naturalist
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