Best Wildflower Hikes Washington (Best Hikes)
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Average customer review:Product Description
A noted botanist, a local hiking columnist, and a renowned outdoor photographer lead 50 field trips to the best native wildflower fields in the state.
*Full-color photography by Ira Spring
*Profiles of 50 wildflower species by Washington botanist Arthur Kruckeberg
*Hike write-ups by Karen Sykes, columnist for The Seattle Post-Intelligencer
*Charts listing hikes by featured flowers, peak viewing times, and more
In 50 hikes throughout the state--from the ocean beach to high alpine terrain and the lowlands in between--experience the beauty of Washington's native wildflowers. They peak only once a year--this guide will tell you where and when you're most likely to find them. They include the ephemeral lewisia tweedyi and the more common trilliums. You'll enjoy meadow flowers (from Sitka valerian to columbine), flowers of the forest, and plants and flowers you'll see on beach walks.
Sidebars on flower habitat and color maps and photos illustrate each hike. A separate section presents in-depth profiles of 50 flowers, including common and Latin botanical names, distinguishing features, where they are commonly found, conditions in which they thrive, accompanying vegetation, their growth and propogation habits, and historical uses (culinary, medicinal, etc.).
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #1739716 in Books
- Brand: The Mountaineers Books
- Published on: 2004-05
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 240 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"This book will transform hikers into naturalists...Art [Kruckeberg's] comments in flowery prose enrich each hiking experience." -- Outdoors West
The book is well-organized, easy to read, and pleasing to the eye....Spring provides 151 magnificent images. -- Sequim Gazette
[H]ikes tinged with the reds, yellows, and blues of Washington's abundant native wildflowers...you can't go wrong with [this book]. -- Seattle Post-Intelligencer
About the Author
Arthur Kruckeberg, co-founder of the Washington Native Plant Society, is Professor Emeritus of Botany, The University of Washington, and author of Gardening with Native Plants of the Pacific Northwest. The late Ira Spring, renowned photographer and trail advocate, authored numerous hiking guides to the Northwest. Karen Sykes, hiking columnist for The Seattle Post-Intelligencer, is the author of Hidden Hikes in Western Washington.
Customer Reviews
Another retreaded Mountaineer's book
1. In the olden days, the Mountaineers really was a pioneering organization in the NW, while also producing some excellent and unique books.
2. I've had this feeling for a while now, but this book really brings home the impression that the Mountaineers, specifically their once great hiking books are now a thing of the past. Instead of writing new material from the ground up, this book is largely a partial rehash of data from the countless prior Mountaineers hiking books. All you need to do is get a hold of some older Mountaineers hiking books and compare the two; they're very similar.
Furthermore, as the other reviewer noted, some very very obvious wildflower hikes aren't in this book. I know, no book can have every single hike, however the content of this book exposes the lack of knowledge of the author. I mean, when you're talking about famous wildflower hikes around Mt Baker, #1 is going to be Skyline Divide, then you have to include Heliotrope Ridge, both of which aren't in there.
3. Bottomline: unfortunately, it appears that the Mountaineers books have really gone downhill in regards to their quality and integrity. If you're looking for a good book re: wildflower hikes in WA, check out Charles Gurche's book; not perfect but much much better.
Best Wildflower Hikes in Washington (State)
I looked forward to getting this book; after all, I've been an avid freelance nature photographer and hiker in this area for many years and had yet to see a title like this. Alas, after buying and reviewing it, I was a bit disappointed. Although it is well-organized (characteristic of "Mountaineers Books" publications) and has a thorough appearance, the photography and image-print quality, some incomplete or inadequate descriptions of locations listed, and the absence of any real photography advice was not up to what I felt could have been better standards. It feels like the Mountaineers took references from their other books, added (35 of 50) chapters written by Karen Sykes, (an avid hiker-journalist writing trail articles for the Seattle Post-Intelligencer newspaper and possible source material for the core of the book), used some older general location photographs (taken by Spring) and repackaged it under a new title / approach with enhanced text. See for yourself - wouldn't you expect the photography to be representative of the best wildflower areas being hiked ? Not so here. Instead, there are some general hiking trail shots, or photos of small flower patches, individual flower subjects, even critter portraits. But for most of it, nothing that visually justifies many locations being listed as the "Best Wildflower Hikes". Examples of choices I particularly question are the Rialto Beach, Burroughs Mountain chapters (these are largely barren of wildflowers, yet are listed among "Best Wildflower Hikes"?! and their representative photography leaves alot to the imagination). And why not "Skyline Divide" at Mount Baker? I also know of wonderful wildflower areas in Mount Rainier National Park not identified, even in chapters for those areas! It is sad thing, because although the book justly credits (the late) Ira Spring's historical contributions to other Mountaineers books, this book does not itself justify its own title. Nevertheless, the book is a decent reference to have.
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