Audiobook: Our Search for a Wilderness, An Account of Two Ornithological Expeditions to Venezuela and British Guiana
Our Search for a Wilderness, An Account of Two Ornithological Expeditions to Venezuela and British Guiana
1 - Preface
- Download Preface audio
- Download The Land of a Single Tree, Pt. 1 audio
- Download The Land of a Single Tree, Pt. 2 audio
- Download The Lake of Pitch, Pt. 1 audio
- Download The Lake of Pitch, Pt. 2 audio
- Download A Woman's Experiences in Venezuela, Pt. 1 audio
- Download A Woman's Experiences in Venezuela, Pt. 2 audio
- Download Georgetown, Pt. 1 audio
- Download Georgetown, Pt. 2 audio
- Download Steamer and Launch to Hoorie Creek, Pt. 1 audio
- Download Steamer and Launch to Hoorie Creek, Pt. 2 audio
- Download A Gold Mine in the Wilderness, Pt. 1 audio
- Download A Gold Mine in the Wilderness, Pt. 2 audio
- Download A Gold Mine in the Wilderness, Pt. 3 audio
- Download Through the Coastal Wilderness, Pt. 1 audio
- Download Through the Coastal Wilderness, Pt. 2 audio
- Download The Water Trail from Georgetown to Aremu, Pt. 1 audio
- Download The Water Trail from Georgetown to Aremu, Pt. 2 audio
- Download Jungle Life at Aremu, Pt. 1 audio
- Download Jungle Life at Aremu, Pt. 2 audio
- Download Aremu Jungle Diary, Pt. 1 audio
- Download Aremu Jungle Diary, Pt. 2 audio
- Download The Life of the Abary Savannas, Pt. 1 audio
- Download The Life of the Abary Savannas, Pt. 2 audio
Audiobooks Genres
Author
Description
In 1908-1909, Mary Blair Beebe and her husband, C. William Beebe made two private expeditions to Venezuela and British Guiana, exploring and collecting live birds for the New York Zoological Park. They then collaborated on a book about their "search for a wilderness," with Mary Blair doing the bulk of the writing. The Beebe's supplemented tropical birding with visits to gold mines in British Guiana and a lake of pitch, which was being mined in the middle of the Venezuelan jungle. Mary Blair's take on things is evident. "A word must be said here from the woman's point of view about the costume which was adopted as being absolutely suited to the bush life. In the first place it was light... and thus freed from the drag of heavy clothing one would come in unfatigued from tramps which would have been impossible for a woman in orthodox dress, no matter how short the skirt. In light khaki knickerbockers, loose negligee shirts of scotch flannel or fibrous cellular cloth, stockings and tennis shoes and a waterproof felt hat, one was ready for anything. One realized as never before with what handicaps woman has tried to follow the footsteps of man; with the result that physical exhaustion has robbed her of all the joys of life in the open." After her divorce from C. William in 1913, Mary Blair wrote several more travel books in the 1920's and 1930's under the pen name Blair Niles. - Summary by Sue Anderson
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