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Dolphins (Nature's Children)

by Jen Green

Is a dolphin a fish? How big are dolphins? How fast can dolphins swim? What do dolphins eat? Find the answers to these questions, and learn much more about the physical characteristics, behavior, habitat, and lives of dolphins.

Dragonflies (Nature's Children)

by Jen Green

What is a dragonfly? How fast can a dragonfly fly? What do dragonflies eat? How long does a dragonfly nymph stay in water? Find the answers to these questions, and learn much more about the physical characteristics, behavior, habitat, and lives of dragonflies.

Wasps (Nature's Children)

by Jen Green

How many kinds of wasps are there? Where do wasps live? What do wasps eat? Do all wasps sting? Find the answers to these questions, and learn much more about the physical characteristics, behavior, habitat, and lives of wasps.

Handbook for Shell Collectors,Revised Edition

by Walter Freeman Webb

Descriptions of over 2000 marine species.

Bicycle Tour Of Utah

by Arthur W. Peterson

An All-County Tour of the Beehive State

Alaska Highway by Bicycle

by Arthur W. Peterson

A story of Arthur Peterson's 1995 tour up the Alaska highway.

California Forest Transect

by Arthur W. Peterson

A review of common tree species across central California

Pedaling to Adventure

by Arthur W. Peterson

An Anthology of Bicycle Vacations Taken by the Author

Two Wheels Across Canada

by Arthur W. Peterson

A Transcontinental Bicycle Tour

The World of the Beaver

by Leonard Lee Rue III

"According to a Cherokee legend," writes Leonard Lee Rue in The World of the Beaver, "it was the Great Spirit, with the help of gigantic beavers, who created the earth. The earth had been covered with water until the Great Spirit sent the beavers diving down beneath the surface to dredge up mud from the bottom to form land masses." Although the beaver is not, nowadays, as big as his legendary ancestors, he continues to be enormously helpful to man and beast. Here Leonard Lee Rue reveals the world and way of life of the good -natured, industrious American beaver and follows him through a full year of his ordinary activities. How does a beaver fell a tree? What does he eat? Is he polygamous or monogamous? How does he build a dam? What does the inside of his lodge look like? Who has been his most deadly enemy in America? The author-whose interest in beavers has caused him to go swimming with them and, on one occasion, led to his becoming stuck in the passage to a lodge-answers all these questions and many others. The informal narrative and the author's remarkable photographs make this really first-rate reading for the nature student and for the ordinary reader. "As intent as man seems to be on destroying the earth," writes Leonard Lee Rue in conclusion, "the Creator may again have to call upon the beavers to help patch things up. The earth's future couldn't be in better paws."

Gray Wolf

by Rutherford Montgomery

Last of the great gray wolves--fleet, savage Speed, iron-jawed killer of the high country. Too cunning for poison and traps, too swift for men and dogs, he eludes every hunter. Can one of his own breed be trained to challenge him? What will happen when the two mighty lobos--father and son--meet in deadly battle?

Tigers at Twilight (Magic Tree House #19)

by Mary Pope Osborne

Having used their magic tree house to travel to India, where they must get a gift to help free the dog Teddy from a spell, Jack and Annie have adventures involving a tiger and other endangered jungle animals.

Exile And Pride: Disability, Queerness and Liberation

by Eli Clare

Exile and Pride is a call to awareness, an exhortation for each of us to examine our connection to and alienation from our environment, our sexuality, and each other.

Vicki A Guide Dog

by Margaret S. Johnson Helen Lossing Johnson

Raised on a military base in England, Vickie a beautiful fawn and black boxer has the life of a dog. But when her master doesn't come home from the Pacific, she is sent to the U.S. to be trained as a show dog. After winning several ribbons, she is sent to become a circus dog. But none of these jobs truly fit her personality. Then one day she is picked and trained to be a guide dog and she finds her true calling.

Honey Bunch and Norman Visit Beaver Lodge (Honey Bunch #34)

by Helen Louise Thorndyke

Honey Bunch Morton--whose real name is Gertrude Marion Morton, although nobody ever calls her that--is a six-year-old girl off on another adventure with her six-year-old neighbor playmate, Norman Clark.<P>Norman sees a big swimming cat down at Barham Pond and Honey Bunch wants to see it for herself, knowing cats don't like water. Henry, the "Park Custodian" tells the children that the "cat" is actually "Mr. Slapper", a beaver caught by a trapper friend of Henry's. But the friend was moving and couldn't keep the beaver as a pet any more. So the friend gave the beaver to Barham Park. Then Henry tells the children "Beavers like company. We should really have another beaver so that Mr. Slapper would have a playmate."<P>Honey Bunch gets an idea that she and Daddy and Mother and Norman could go on a vacation to a place where there were beavers. Then she might find a playmate to bring back for Mr. Slapper... <P>"Honey Bunch #34", aka "Honey Bunch and Norman #6".<P>"Helen Louise Thorndyke" is a pseudonym of "Harriet S. Adams".

Wacky Weather for Walter (Read and Roll)

by Amy Paradis

Walter is driving to his sister's house across town. With plenty of Wacky Weather for Walter in store, will he make it there in one piece?

Harvard Business Review: Dealing with Drought (HBR Case Study and Commentary)

by Forest L. Reinhardt Alison Beard

From the November 2016 issue. A farmer debates whether to continue planting or lease his land. By Forest L. Reinhardt, and Alison Beard. Expert commentary by Kim Morison, and Ken LaGrande.

Hawaiian Legends of Volcanoes

by W. D. Westervelt

Interspersed with legends of the fire goddess Pele, the lightning goddess Hiiaka, and others, are nuggets of related geological and historical information. First published in 1916, this book has a four-page appendix and notes on Polynesian language.

The End of the Wild

by Stephen M. Meyer

Today the guiding hand of natural selection is unmistakably human. With these words Stephen M. Meyer begins a stunningly clear-eyed view of the extinction crisis. Marshaling evidence from the last ten years of research, he argues that nothing-not national or international laws, global bioreserves, local sustainability schemes, or "wildlands"-will change the course we have set: the loss of half of the earth's species by the end of the century. We will come to share the planet only with species that thrive in human-dominated environments.

Stolen Pony

by Glen Rounds

(from the book jacket): Stolen! Locked in a swaying truck, the little blind pony snorts with terror. Horse thieves captured him in the dead of night. And now he is being carried farther and farther from home. What will happen when the thieves find out he is blind? Will they turn him loose? But how can a blind pony find his way home?

Wildflower Gardening

by James Underwood Crockett Oliver E. Allen

This gardening reference will teach you which wildflowers will grow best in your own backyard. Co-authored by James Underwood Crockett, an distinguished horticulturist, writer on gardening and, TV guru of plant care.

Who Knew?: Green Hints and Tips to Save Time, Money... And the Planet

by Jeanne Bossolina Lubin

Who Knew?: You can save 40% on the cost of air conditioning, that bottled water creates over 1.5 million tons of plastic waste a year, turning off your car's air conditioner can improve your fuel economy by more than 20%... and much more.

Birds in the Wilderness: Adventures of an Ornithologist

by George Miksch Sutton

Trained as an ornithologist and painter, George M. Sutton recounts a series of adventures with birds in the first decades of the twentieth century. In "Titania and Oberon" he tells the story of raising a pair of baby road-runners. In "The Harris's Sparrow's Eggs" he describes the fierce competition between U.S. and Canadian ornithologists who searched for the nest and eggs of a reclusive bird. In "Kints!" Sutton writes of observing and recording one of the last known nesting pairs of ivory-billed woodpeckers.

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