Not just another birding memoir. First one I've read that makes a point of world travel, of going to the birds instead of aggressively seeking out the accidentals, the vagrant rarities. First one I've read that connects so very much with all the local birders, guides, drivers, and random strangers who rescued our boy from some, erm, predicaments.
Ecotourism is a great way to make money, as one former logger discovered when he befriended a wild Giant Antpitta at his home in Ecuador. And for people in countries like Ghana and Myanmar, it's a great way to make a career out of doing what you love.
Palm oil. The plantations on the tropical island of New Britain are representative of "one of the world's worst environmental scourges." And as we've learned elsewhere, the industry is killing Orangutans. But it's hard for us to stop using, as palm oil "is used in half of all supermarket products--including lipstick, soap, chocolate, instant noodles, bread, detergent, and ice cream--and is labeled under a host of names, such as vegetable oil, vegetable fat, glycerol, and Elaeis guineensis. Otoh, it's an efficient source, as "compared to similar crops (such as soybeans and canola), palm trees can produce ten times as much oil per acre."
So, it's still a trade-off for those kinds of goods. Well, at least we can cut our intake of processed fatty foods and read labels to choose, for example, ice cream without any vegetable oil. After all, it's not like we need lipstick, instant noodles, snack crackers, etc.
Anyway, the book was a joy to read, even though I've already read several birder and twitcher memoirs already. I liked Strycker's gentle enthusiasm, his philosophical bits, the tidbits of culture, geography, history that he lightly sprinkled in. I appreciate that he talked about money and fatigue, and that he included a few wonderful photos, a list of what was in his backpack, the checklist of birds seen, and the index.
(But you know who really needs to publically appreciate Strycker's pathfinding trek? Arwan Dwarshuis. I bet he couldn't have accomplished what he did w/out learning from Strycker's field blog.)