posted by admin on Oct 11

Product Description
Whether you’re hiking, fishing, kayaking, cross-country skiing, or taking a mountain bike ride in the backcountry, a GPS receiver can help you reach your destination and return safely–but only if you know how to use it! Outdoor Navigation with GPS, the most complete, easy-to-use GPS book available, is your guide to getting the most out of a receiver, from basic consumer advice to advanced techniques. Starting with essential definitions such as UTM coordinate systems, position formats, and map datums, and moving on to creating “waypoints,” and using your GPS with a computer, long-time GPS instructor Stephen W. Hinch breaks down the jargon and teaches you what you really need to know.

  • An emphasis on practical applications over technical theory.
  • Examples include illustrative screenshots from the newest receivers–from top companies like Garmin, Magellan, and DeLorme.
  • Lists up-to-date Web resources for the rapidly changing technology of GPS and its uses.

More Outdoor Navigation With GPS: Hiking, Geocaching, Canoeing, Kayaking, Fishing, Outdoor Photography, Backpacking, Mountain Biking info click here!

posted by admin on Apr 11

Fishing Alabama: An Angler's Guide to 50 of the State's Prime Fishing Spots: Floyd Edwin Mashburn

Editorial Reviews

Fishing Alabama is the essential guide to fishing in this surprisingly diverse southern state.

From the Back Cover
With the second largest inland waterway system of any state, the Heart of Dixie is famous not only for its bass but also for its crappie, bream, catfish, and trout. It is also home to such saltwater species as amberjack, redfish, grouper, red snapper, and fighting tarpon, the state fish. From the Appalachian Mountains and the Tennessee River Valley of the north, to the swamps and bayous of the coastal south, Alabama takes a backseat to no other state in its wealth of angling opportunities.But how do you know when and where to fish, how to get there, and what gear to use? The answers are all here in Fishing Alabama—the most accurate and up-to-date angler’s resource available on the state’s choice sport-fishing destinations. Local angler Ed Mashburn knows these waters, and he shares all the information to help you fish Alabama with success. He provides detailed descriptions of fifty fishing hot spots and gives you expert advice on everything you need to know before setting out. Inside you’ll find:
• A listing of the game fish at each location
• Tips on lures, flies, bait, tackle, and techniques for each location
• Directions and information on camping facilities
• Words to the wise on weather and dangerous critters
• Maps and photos

Order Fishing Alabama: An Angler’s Guide to 50 of the State’s Prime Fishing Spots: Floyd Edwin Mashburn form Amazon.

posted by admin on Mar 11

Fishing Alabama: An Angler's Guide to 50 of the State's Prime Fishing Spots: Floyd Edwin Mashburn

Editorial Reviews

Bringing together more than ten years of hard-earned fishing experience in the Heart of Dixie—from the mountains of the north to the Mobile Delta and the Gulf of Mexico in the south—Fishing Alabama is the essential guide to fishing in this surprisingly diverse southern state. Alabama, which has the second largest inland waterway system of any state, is not only famous for its bass, but also has plenty of shad, walleye, and trout on offer; and it is home to a great variety of saltwater species, from amberjacks and redfish, to groupers and fighting tarpon, the state fish. Ed Mashburn selects the best spots, allowing anglers to use their limited fishing time to their best advantage. And he provides plenty of useful advice, including specific techniques and rigging hints for particular places.

About the Author

Ed Mashburn has fished in many places across the United States in both fresh and salt water. Whether at the pond side on foot to kayak fishing in bayous and rivers to big game fishing in sixty foot power craft, he has cast a line for just about anything that swims. He has caught a few fish, too. In the past ten years, he has seen just about all of Alabama, and he has fished in most of the wet places in the state. When not fishing, Ed is text editor for Florida Sport Fishing Magazine and also Destination Fish magazine. He has published articles on fishing, gardening, and sailing topics, and he is also a longtime photojournalist. When not fishing or writing about fishing or building wooden boats, Ed is an English teacher at Baldwin County High School in his hometown of Bay Minette, Alabama, and an adjunct instructor at Faulkner State College in southern Alabama.

Order Fishing Alabama: An Angler’s Guide to 50 of the State’s Prime Fishing Spots: Floyd Edwin Mashburn form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 28

28 Days Behind Bars: Harold Wagoner

Editorial Reviews

Join the author on a bicycle ride that you won¡¯t easily forget. As he leaves behind all the ties of metropolitan Southern California, he rediscovers the simple joys of life, childhood and human nature. He takes you along on his solo tour across the United States, traveling the northern route from Seattle to New York City. The author relates, first-hand, his impressions of urban and rural America. His tape-recorded thoughts and descriptions take you to the very place and time, from the early selection of equipment and routes, to the final entry into metropolitan New York.

You will find and appealing sense of humor, a recollection of childhood years in Wisconsin, and the insights of a man with age and wisdom on his side. He tells of the joys of a tailwind, the hardship of a headwind, and the deep appreciation of Mother Nature in all her forms. Your are given an intimate look at this man and his love of his country.

About the Author
Raised on a farm in Wisconsin, Harold Wagoner relocated to Southern California in his early 30’s. It was during his work in the aerospace industry that his bicycle riding began in earnest. His love of outdoor recreation is shown through kayaking, hiking, fishing and camping.

Order 28 Days Behind Bars: Harold Wagoner form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 28

Racing Pigs and Giant Marrows: Travels Around the North Country Fairs: Harry Pearson

Editorial Reviews

Review
‘Pearson is funnier than Bill Bryson … a prize onion of a tome that’ll leave you streaming at the eyes with merriment’ INDEPENDENT ‘Just as much of a hoot [as THE FAR CORNER]. The title explains his remit, but can’t do justice to his one-liners and digressions’ MANCHESTER EVENING NEWS

Pearson has been called an English Bill Bryson, and those who read his previous book, The Far Corner, will know they are in for another treat. A dazzling cornucopia of hilarious country stories and experiences, as Pearson bravely exposes himself to the vagaries of farming communities. The enduring bonds of country folk contrast starkly with the increasingly fractured nature of urban life, which Pearson’s insight acutely observes. (Kirkus UK)

Harry Pearson vowed that his next project would be about the summer—specifically, about a summer of shows and fairs in the north of England. Encompassing such diverse talents as fell-running, tupperware-boxing, and rabbit fancying (literally), and containing many more jokes about goats than is legal in the Isle of Man, Racing Pigs and Giant Marrows must be the only book in existence to explain the design faults of earwigs.

Order Racing Pigs and Giant Marrows: Travels Around the North Country Fairs: Harry Pearson form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 28

Sailing Tall: Around the World on the Square-rigged PASSAT (1946-1948): Max Wood

Editorial Reviews

Author Max Wood served his apprenticeship on one of the very last commercial voyages of any cargo square-rigger. Sailing Tall is a piece of living history, in which he documents in great detail work practices and a way of life now totally gone by. It is also a vivid and honest account of the “true” sailors.

A natural storyteller, modest and good-humored, Wood tells it all as it really was: the exhilaration, the camaraderie, the constant hard work, the fears, the occasional terrors, the frequent boredom, the sexual frustration, the immense fatigue…and also the pride of being one of those determined few who, throughout the ages, have heroically challenged the awesome forces of nature for little reward but a spartan life.

These memoirs constitute an invaluable document of an extinct breed, as well as a moving portrait of a boy’s coming-of-age, as Wood leaves his family and learns about the world and himself.

About the Author
Max Wood served his nautical apprenticeship on one of the very last commercial voyages of any cargo square-rigger.

Order Sailing Tall: Around the World on the Square-rigged PASSAT (1946-1948): Max Wood form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 28

Stalwart Sweden: Joachim Joesten

Editorial Reviews

JOACHIM JOESTBN STALWART SWEDEN DOUBLEDAY, DORAN AND COMPANY, INC. Garden City, New York STALWART SWEDEN CHAPTER I The Medal Has Two Sides WHAT will Sweden do This question, long of secondary interest, may soon be come one of paramount importance. On the answer may well depend the success or failure of at least one phase of the concerted assault on Hitlers For tress Europe the counterinvasion of Norway. Only the king and the government in Stockholm can provide the answer, or even anticipate it on a better basis than conjecture. All others, in trying to foretell what Sweden will do if and when the Allies land in Norway, are faced with the problem of the jumping cat. In such a situation it would seem to be a dictate of ele mentary prudence not to take anything for granted and to prepare for all possible contingencies. There is, however, a widespread tendency in America to dismiss such caution and to count on Sweden as a sure ally to-be in the coming struggle. While events may justify this optimism, they may also bring bitter disappointments. For a sound approach to the question of what Sweden 2 STALWART SWEDEN may be expected to do in a given situation, we must care fully study what she has been doing up to the present. What has her role been in the first four years of the war The American public in general is little informed on this point. This kck of knowledge is due pardy to the traditional Cinderella role in world politics of the northern countries, but in even greater part to the misinformation deliberately spread here by Swedish propagandists. There is a Swedish myth in America, just as there used to be a Finnish myth whose shabby remains still linger in many peoples minds. In all respects but diplomatic protocol Finland today is our enemy. She is formally at war with our two principal allies Britain and Russia she is fighting alongside our mortal enemy her ports shelter the submarines, and her air fields serve as bases for the bombers that sink American ships in the Arctic. Yet all this notwithstanding, numbers of people here still are prepared to excuse and cover almost anything Finland does on the grounds that she is a democratic country who quite accidentally happens to fight her private war at the sides of the fascist aggressors. The people who continue blandly to credit this danger ous nonsense usually are also the stanchest believers in the Swedish myth. This myth has sprung from various sources. Its roots reach back to the early thirties, when roving reporters and social tourists discovered Scandinavia, which had been, for centuries, almost ignored by the world. The foreign visitors, searching the globe for a place where people lived peacefully and prosperously in an at THE MEDAL HAS TWO SIDES 3 mosphere of social progress and international co-operation, found Scandinavia, and, in particular, Sweden, came very close to their dreams. They were enchanted by what they saw and heard, and they eagerly rushed their findings into print. That was the era of Sweden The Middle Way, and similar eulogies. Overnight a little-known and neglected country rose to the rank of a world sensation. Here, be tween latitudes 55 and 69 North, was Utopia. The glowing picture which the enthusiastic Utopia seekers drew of Sweden and her neighbors in the North at the time was, on the whole, justified, though many of the books were written in a spirit of uncritical admiration for everything Swedish. As the years went by, however, the picture almost im perceptibly changed the light lost much of its luster, the shade expanded and grew more opaque. But the Middle-Way enthusiasts never even noticed the transformation. The lengthening shadow that fell over the Swedish pic ture was Hitlers. The tourists and the fiction writers did not notice it, but the statesmen and political observers did or at least some of them did. They began to wonder how Utopia would stand up in the great test to come…

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posted by admin on Feb 27

Rivers Of The Eastern Shore - Seventeen Maryland Rivers: Hulbert Footner

Editorial Reviews

RIVERS OF THE EASTERN SHORE D C o nb c my ttJ L HERVEY ALLEN Planned and Started TANCE LINDSAY STERN SH Maryland Rivers 5 by iHULBERT FOOTNER Illustrated by ON SOPHER Contents 1. BEGINNINGS 5 2. WILLIAM CLAIBORNE 24 3. COLONEL EDMUND SCARBURGH …. 40 4. THE PICAROONS 48 5. THE POCOMOKE RIVZ, 68 6. THE LITTLE AND THE BIG ANNEMESSEX . . 86 7-THE MANOKIN 104 8. THE WICOMICO 120 9. THE NANTICOKE RIVLR 135 10. THE DORCHESTER MARSHES . . . . I 2 11. THE LITTLE CHOPTANK 163 12. THE CHOPTANK RIVER, PART ONE . . . I O 13. THE CHOPTANK RIVER, PART TWO . . .185 14. THE TOWN OF OXFORD 205 IJ. THE TRED AVON RIVER 21 8 1 6. ST. MICHAELS 236 17. THE MILES RIVER . 2J5 1 8. THE LLOYDS OF WYE 269 vii . YUU CONTENTS 19. THE tf RIVER 294 ,. 20. THEd iSTER RIVER 309 21. CHESTERTOWN 326 22. THE SASSAFRAS AND BOHEMIA RIVERS . - 339 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 360 SOURCES 362 INDEX 369 RIVERS OF THE EASTERN SHORE EASTERN SHOKE CHAPTER I Beginnings T JL. . H HE Eastern Shore, as every Marylander knows, comprises that peninsula lying between Chesapeake Bay and the Atlantic Ocean. More than three hundred years ago, the first white settlers in Virginia and Maryland established them selves on the western shore of the bay, and naturally they called the land on the other side the Eastern Shore. To them no further designation was required, and it has been the Eastern Shore ever since. In the language of the geologists, Chesapeake Bay is a drowned river, in other words, the Susquehanna, to which all the rivers which now empty into the bay on both sides were once tributary. In the course of ages, this part of the coastal plain sank beneath the sea, not once but four times, they say. The first time the land emerged, according to their theory, the Susquehanna River, coming down from the north west, finding itself blocked by a great shoal or bank of detritus, was diverted to the south for a hundred and fifty miles before finding an outlet to the sea. This bank was the first Eastern Shore. It sank again, and the waves of the sea washed the base of the cliffs of the piedmont country, or foothills. Each time the shore sank it received deposits of detritus from the rivers, and it is in those 5 6 RIVERS OF THE EASTERN SHORE various layers that the geologists read the story today. The ice-cap never extended quite as far south as this, but the rivers brought down great masses of ice laden with boulders and detritus. Such boulders are to be found buried on the Eastern Shore today. Here and there one lies on top of the ground, but the sight of a rock of any kind is rare in that country of silt and sand and clay. The people of the Eastern Shore believe that their coun try is again sinking under the sea, and point to various evi dences to prove it. The geologists say it may be so, but decline to commit themselves. Such a mighty change, they say, is not to be measured by a few generations of men. On the other hand, anybody can see the depredations of the winds and the tides in a land where there are no bulwarks of rock. The banks of the rivers and the bay shores are washing the islands are going fast. Some islands have disappeared altogether within the space of recorded history. Today the Eastern Shore comprises a peninsula shaped roughly like a bunch of grapes. It hangs down from a stem in the north, where only a few miles of land separate the waters of the Delaware from the Chesapeake, spreads out in a wide shoulder, and tapers off to a point Cape Charles at the south. It includes almost the whole of the little state of Delaware, with nine counties of Maryland, and two of Vir ginia. It is about 136 miles long and 55 miles wide at the shoulder. In this small expanse there are no less than nineteen navigable rivers. As rivers go, they are small affairs flowing through a drowned country, each widens into an immense tidal estuary…

Order Rivers Of The Eastern Shore - Seventeen Maryland Rivers: Hulbert Footner form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 27

The Best Women's Travel Writing 2006: True Stories from Around the World (Travelers' Tales): Lucy McCauley

Editorial Reviews

These inspiring, uplifting tales are told by women who traveled to the ends of the earth to discover new places, people, and, ultimately, facets of themselves. The common threads connecting the stories are a woman’s fresh perspective, lively storytelling, and a compelling narrative that makes the reader laugh, cry, and wish she were there. The voices are global and themes are eclectic, with stories that encompass the full spectrum of travel adventure. Pieces in the 2006 collection include discovering Russia at 3,000 feet, learning to save face and start smoking in Italy, learning to dance the tango in Argentina, and journeying from Senegal to Mali on a horse.

Order The Best Women’s Travel Writing 2006: True Stories from Around the World (Travelers’ Tales): Lucy McCauley form Amazon.

posted by admin on Feb 27

A Natural History of Nature Writing: Frank Stewart

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly
The task at hand in this well-documented, well-written volume is no less arduous than Henry David Thoreau’s hopes for his extended stay at Walden Pond. Essayist and poet Stewart has attempted to capture the mystery as well as the history of nature writing. Without transgressing biographical or historical certainties, Stewart has created full-bodied characters in his interwoven portraits of the genre’s most important practitioners. In doing so, the reader approaches an empirical understanding of that ephemeral “in-betweenness” with nature that is often left behind when reading the work of such disparate figures as Gilbert White, John Muir or Edward Abbey. Abbey’s anarchic activism may have given him a cult following among renegade naturalists, but it is Thoreau to whom Stewart repeatedly returns for his historical understanding of the genre’s ceaseless appeal. “They make us aware of a kind of knowing that is potential in us but that we are apt to ignore or suppress, as though asleep,” Stewart writes of his subjects and their work. Rigorous research and engaging prose make this study a useful secondary text for the academic and the general nature enthusiast alike. The book’s extensive bibliography of further readings points the interested reader down any number of new paths.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
Stewart (English, Univ. of Hawaii) focuses on the development of nature writing, arguing that “whatever forms it takes, nature writing at its best is a literary art as rigorous as natural science.” Interweaving biography, history, and literary criticism, his book is a highly readable summary of what could otherwise have been a broad and complex topic. The authors featured are Englishman Gilbert White and Americans Henry David Thoreau, John Burroughs, John Muir, Aldo Leopold, Rachel Carson, and Edward Abbey, with mentions of others such as Mary Austin and Bill McKibben, with his disturbing message for our time. Stewart shows the relationship of each author to the previous one(s) and the social or historical context in which he or she was working, e.g., Leopold finally came to see that preserving the natural world is highly practical, not sentimental, but Americans returning from World War II did not want to hear his message. The director of Share Our Strength, a nonprofit agency that fights world hunger, editor Shore requested the essays in his volume as donations to the agency’s fund-raising efforts. Such a formula doesn’t automatically assure excellence, but in this case it has. Nearly all of the 28 essays are excellent examples of nature writing and of the essay form. Many well-known names are included here, such as McKibben, Peter Matthiessen, David Raines Wallace, Thomas Eisner, Sue Hubbell, Diane Ackerman, Janet Lembke, and Vice President Al Gore, who wrote the introduction. There is a wide variety in the topics and approaches, from a scientist excited about what electron microscope reveals to a bird watcher observing nature’s reaction to rain after a drought. Nearly all the authors write with humor or enthusiasm or power or all three. This collection, like Stewart’s, will be of interest to public and academic libraries.
Nancy Shires, East Carolina Univ., Greenville, N.C.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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