Tag Archives: Bryan_Pfeiffer

Animal Attractions — Free Lecture

Speaker: Bryan Pfeiffer
Date:  Tuesday, February 12, 2013
Time: 6:30 P.M.
Location: Richmond Free  Library, Richmond, VT

photo credit - Bryan Pfeiffer

photo credit – Bryan Pfeiffer

On Tuesday, Feb. 12, on the occasion of Charles  Darwin’s birthday and just
a few days before Valentine’s Day, writer and  naturalist Bryan Pfeiffer
will present a program, Animal Attractions. Bryan  will illustrate his talk by
showing some of his most revealing and amorous  wildlife photographs in a
vivid display of courtship among birds, bees and  other wildlife cavorting in
ways you might not expect. This presentation is  rated PG for “politely
graphic”.

Commentator, author, and birding bon  vivant Bryan Pfeiffer is well known
throughout Vermont as the coauthor with  Ted Murin of the go-to guide for
birders, Birdwatching in Vermont. Bryan  teaches writing at the University of
Vermont and conducts nature tours through  his company Vermont Bird Tours.
You can view the VBT website at  http://www.VermontBirdTours.com/. Bryan’s
wildlife photography is on display  at http://www.WingsPhotography.com/. He
writes regularly about the natural  world on his blog the Daily Wing at
http://www.DailyWing.net/.

This  program is free and open to the public. The Richmond Free Library is located  on Bridge St. in Richmond. Free parking is available on site. For questions or  more information, you respond to this e-mail or visit the GMAS website at  http://greenmountainaudubon.org/.

Hope to see many of you  there.

Bruce MacPherson on behalf of the  GMAS

Bryan Pfeiffer Takes A New (old) Trail

photo credit - Bryan Pfeiffer

photo credit – Bryan Pfeiffer

Bryan Pfeiffer is a well-known Central Vermont writer, naturalist, photographer and educator.  Many of us have enjoyed his bird walks/tours, his humor-filled lectures, and his photographic skills.  His blog post the other day caught many of us by surprise — not that he’s abandoning some of his many ventures to work on a book — but that he is cutting way back on his electronic activity.  For me, tethered to a MacBook, iPad, and iPhone too much, it was a call to look at how I balance my outdoor and other activities with blogging, Tweeting, and Facebooking.  (I made that a verb to see if my English-teacher wife reads this!

Bryan outlines his decision with his usual clarity and thoughtfulness.  It’s a good read for any birder:

Fifteen years ago I left journalism for nature. I swapped a necktie for binoculars, a reporter’s notepad for a naturalist’s field book. Although my income sank to levels of voluntary poverty, I inherited wealth in a new currency: a warbler’s dawn melody, an orchid’s purple glow, a dragonfly’s ancient tenacity.

This life outside I have been eager to share with others. Coded into my DNA is a drive to bring nature and people together. It is how I’ve made my living. It has given me purpose. I suppose it’s no different than journalism. If the free trade of facts and knowledge are essential to a functioning society, then so too is the discovery and enjoyment of nature critical to its future. And to our own.

If I couldn’t get you outside, your ears tuned to a Mink Frog, your nose tingling with the scent of Balsam Poplar, your eyes wide and locked on a Regal Fritillary, your mouth savoring serviceberries, or your feet wet in a spruce bog, then here at The Daily Wing I ventured to unite your senses with wildlife and wild places. For three years this blog, with all due humility, has been my intersection of nature and journalism.

Now it will rest.

My blend of the wild and the wired will enter diapause, nature’s state of dormancy. Not only will this blog rest, but so will my fling with Facebook, Twitter, digital photography, radio television broadcasts, PowerPointing and other electronic communications. I’m dimming the lights and heading for the woods with a notebook and pencil.  (Read the whole post here.)

It’s minus 16 F this morning and still dark out so I think I’m comfortable drinking coffee and writing — but I’m giving Bryan’s diapause idea a lot of thought as we move to saner temperatures and arriving birds.

Sign up by RSS feed or via email to have future articles sent to you.