Backyard Wildlife
Title:
Wild in the Backyard
Author:
Arefa Tehsin
Publisher:
Puffin Books – Published by Penguin Group
Year:
2015
Pages:
229
Chapters:
25
Written
by Arefa Tehsin this book takes us into a world inhabited by different species
that visit our backyard – species we often see, but know little about. Each
species is brought to life through in-depth research into its habits, sketches,
anecdotes and questions.
The beginning
The
prolific writer Arefa Tehsin has authored multiple books for children,
including ‘The
Land of the Setting Sun and Other Nature Tales’ with Raza H Tehsin. She
also writes columns and articles for newspapers and magazines. She begins this
book, Wild in the Backyard, with a dedication that brings together bookstores
and forests in an interesting way: ‘To my
father, who took me to the bookstore and the jungle, who held my hand, yet left
me alone. At both places’. Few lines could have captured the spirit of the
book more aptly.
The
first line of the introduction too is both – pertinent and striking: ‘We may think that wilderness and wildlife
are confined to forests. But there is a whole lot of wild in our own
backyards’. Most of us do associate wildlife with large pristine forests far
away from where we stay. While numerous studies have shown that forests have
hardly ever been pristine spaces devoid of humans, this perception has remained
largely unchanged. This has led people to believe that wildlife should be
present only within forests; and any ‘wild’ species seen outside forest should be
sent back to forests or culled. This perception has led us to neglect or ignore
the many species that share our rural and urban homes. Arefa’s book challenges
both these notions.
Strengths
One
of the biggest strengths of the book is that the author shares her experiences of
natural history in a conversational manner and with great clarity. For example,
the first chapter titled ‘The Devils Own’, introduces young readers to the life
of bats with lucid, yet informative, descriptions. One wishes that other
educational material on these fascinating mammals could be designed along these
lines, rather than being packed with the usual dry-as-the-dust statistics and
names alone. In many cases, the author shares nuggets of natural history that
are bound to awe a majority of her readers. The chapter ‘Centipedes: The
Hundred Legger’ for example, states that ‘Centipedes
can have 30 to more than 300 legs, but not 100. . . they have only odd number
of pairs of legs. . .each pair of legs is longer than the one in front’. In
another case, the author shares gems like, “some
super-smart Capuchin Monkeys upset these millipedes and then run the
awful-looking liquid (that the millipedes release) on their skins to repel
mosquitoes!”, without making any attempt to qualify this observation with a
human-centric value-based explanation. Her writing often leads readers to mull
over interesting questions, like: “How does rain affect an organism’s ability
to use echolocation?” In other chapters, she introduces readers to some more
interesting discoveries on animal behaviour. For example, in the chapter
‘Crows: Crafty Crows’, the author describes how: “A few scientists in Auckland decided to try out the thirsty crow story
in their lab. Remember the story of the crow dropping pebbles into the pitcher to
raise the level of water in it? The result of the experiment point out that
crows are as clever with some tasks as human seven-year olds”! She adds to
this by mentioning how crows are known in some cases to “... come and drop the nuts they’re carrying at
traffic signals so that the cars passing by can break the nuts’ hard shell”. Showing
how intelligent the crows are, she points out that phrases like ‘he’s a
birdbrain’ may hold little weight. In the chapter ‘Squirrels: The
Shadow-tailed’, the author illustrates how superstitions do not have rational
basis and can be disproved. In other cases she speaks directly to her young
readers with passages like “Monkeys sure
know how to have fun! You should send you Ma and Pa to go and learn from the
monkey elders, who let their kids have fun all the time”.
Pitfalls
Although
a wonderful read, this book has some errors that could have been avoided. For
instance in the chapter on ‘Rats: Rats! Who is that’, the author wrongly
attributes the gregarious bamboo flowering or Mautam to Nagaland instead of
Mizoram. In other cases, the author also seems to offer an over simplistic
perspective to otherwise complex issues when she connects the flowering of
bamboo in the 1960’s with the Mizo armed movement without adequately addressing
the complex socio-political and economic dimensions of the issue. It may have
been better if the author had stuck to describing how this flowering attracted
rats that ate more than 90 per cent of the crops even during 2007 – 2008. The
chapter on ‘Butterflies: Fluttering Fairies’ mentions Bombay Natural History
Society without providing any context. In another case, the author suggests
that readers invest in keeping an owl-box in their homes. Is this really safe
for the owl and for those who keep them? Apart from practical problems such as
where and how to procure these boxes and how to feed the owls, is it ethical or
legal to keep a bird in captivity? This book would have been more interesting
if it had included more Indian words and descriptions of the beliefs and
customs that local communities have towards the ‘wildlife in their backyards’.
The reference section could have been a lot richer!
To conclude
There
are many reasons to enjoy this book. The most important one, though, is for the
author’s writing and her insights. For example, the author brings us humans
down from the pedestal that we usually place ourselves on vis-a-vis wildlife,
subtly, yet successfully “There are many
creatures that have got used to our noisy and clumsy habits’”. This is
followed some pages later by: “Sadly,
humans do more monkey business than monkeys themselves”. In another
instance the author makes the observation: “Who
knows, we may be putting dried cockroaches on our dry lips every day”! By
hinting at how we may be consuming animal products without our knowledge in
this way the author succeeds in teaching without preaching. Also delightful are
the many succinct one-liners like ‘mongoose
is bold but shy’ and ‘butterflies are
beauties with brains’. Not only does the author pose questions in a non
monotonous manner, she also frequently uses words that the younger generation is
likely to relate to. But, for me, the highlight of the books was the simple
explanations of many that we come across frequently, yet choose to skip over
even though we may not understand their meaning or import. This book talks of
some of these terms with rare simplicity. For example the difference between locusts
and grass hoppers is presented in a single line: “when thousands and millions of them form a gang we call them locust;
and when they live alone in our gardens and meadows we call them grass
hoppers.’
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