A New Zealand Nature Journal


Book Description

A New Zealand Nature Journal will teach you how to keep a nature journal to record your amazing discoveries. Have you ever noticed that ladybirds have different numbers of spots? Or that leaves can be pointed or round, long or short, soft or hard? There is so much to explore in the natural world. And keeping a nature journal is the best way to record all your amazing discoveries.




Welcome to New Zealand: A Nature Journal


Book Description

"Get inspired to create your own nature journal no matter where you live! Have you ever noticed that ladybugs have different numbers of spots? When you look at a leaf, what do you see? Is it pointed of round, long or short, soft or hard? There is so much to explore in the natural world--and keeping a nature journal is the best way to record all your amazing discovers"--Page 4 of cover.







The Maoris of New Zealand


Book Description




Welcome to New Zealand


Book Description

Features the "Welcome to New Zealand" travel publications from Waiviata International Ltd. in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. Posts an overview of the country and directories of hotels, restaurants, real estate, and shopping outlets. Links to tourist information for specific cities, including Auckland, Rotorua, Christchurch, Queenstown, and Wellington. Provides access to the Waiviata home page and publication order form.




New Zealand and the Sea


Book Description

As a group of islands in the far south-west Pacific Ocean, New Zealand has a history that is steeped in the sea. Its people have encountered the sea in many different ways: along the coast, in port, on ships, beneath the waves, behind a camera, and in the realm of the imagination. While New Zealanders have continually altered their marine environments, the ocean, too, has influenced their lives. A multi-disciplinary work encompassing history, marine science, archaeology and visual culture, New Zealand and the Sea explores New Zealand’s varied relationship with the sea, challenging the conventional view that history unfolds on land. Leading and emerging scholars highlight the dynamic, ocean-centred history of these islands and their inhabitants, offering fascinating new perspectives on New Zealand’s pasts. ‘The ocean has profoundly shaped culture across this narrow archipelago . . . The meeting of land and sea is central in historical accounts of Polynesian discovery and colonisation; European exploratory voyaging; sealing, whaling and the littoral communities that supported these plural occupations; and the mass migrant passage from Britain.’ – Frances Steel










Secrets of a Devon Wood


Book Description

Walking one day in the woods behind her cottage in Devon, nature illustrator and blogger Jo Brown became captivated by the sight of a Green Dock Beetle on a leaf and took a photograph of it in order to be able to draw it. That first tiny emerald bug was followed by more insects, and then birds, fungi, plants and flowers. The result is Secrets of a Devon Wood, a rich illustrated memory of her discoveries in the order in which she encountered them, so that the book flows smoothly with the seasons and the emergence of different wildlife. In enchanting, minute detail she zooms in on a bog beacon mushroom, a buff-tailed bumblebee, or a native bluebell. And she notes facts about their physiology and life history: "The flowers are narrow & darker than H. hispanica & H.x. mossartiana," she writes. "Drooping stem. Almost all flowers are on one side. Sweet scent." This journal is a treat for the senses, both a hymn to the intricate beauty of the natural world and a quiet call to arms for all of us to acknowledge and preserve it. It is a book that will stay with you long after you finally put it down