Product Details
Wildflowers of Vermont

Wildflowers of Vermont
By Kate Carter

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Product Description

The perfect fieldguide for anyone wishing to identify the flowers that grow wild in Vermont. This pocket-size guidebook features 235 color photos of wildflowers growing on Vermont's trailsides, roadsides, alpine summits, woodlands and bogs.

Key information includes:

* Flowers organized by color
* Common names, latin names, family names
* Basic descriptions of each flower
* At-a-glance flower size and plant height
* Bloom time and habitat
* Look-alike flowers
* Date and location of each flower photographed

Take it with you everywhere! 256 color pages, 3.5 by 6 inches, protected by a weather-resistant clear, vinyl cover.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2383372 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-12-12
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 256 pages

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
A fast-moving item. This book sold 10% of its press run in the first week. It's being purchased by bookstores, outdoor specialty shops, gift shops, school systems, and individuals.

From the Author
The detail of the color photos is spectacular!

About the Author
Kate Carter combined her life-long love for the outdoors, her writing experience, and her photographic background to produce Wildflowers of Vermont. Many of the photos were taken while she hiked and biked Vermont's trails and backroads. She is the author of one other book, Mountain Bike Vermont (Menasha Ridge Press) and the editor of Vermont Sports Today newpaper. She lives in Waterbury Center, Vermont.


Customer Reviews

Great Little Guide5
I bought this book last week and it's about my 10th guide to wildflowers. It's a really spendid guide in three respects at least. First the photographs are wonderful. Ms. Carter is a first-class photographer. Second, the guide fits in your pocket, something no other guides do. Third, it doesn't bog you down in lots of details that are not important in the field. Once you have identified a plant, you can enter the name, or Latin name into a Web search engine such as Google and find out more than any guide could possible cover anyway. It has lots of little embellishments that show the author is also a good publisher (this isn't from an international conglomerate, but from her own publishing company). Flowers are organized by color, and flower size is emphasized so you don't think that 2-inch color blossom in the book is different from the 1/4-inch flower in the field. It's a great little guide and is useful throughout the NorthEast because we share the same wildflowers.

Go visit these flowers!5
Kate Carter's little book is a wonderful invitation to visit the countryside and see firsthand the old time beauty that a place like Vermont has to offer. A profusion of the most interesting looking flowers will greet the hiker or traveler in almost any corner of Vermont. Make sure you are ready with this little book in hand.

These are exquisite photographs--most of them taken by Carter herself. The division by color makes it easy to identify the flower you find and a joy to look through this book in the evening after a day on the hiking trail. There's also a neat guide to botanical terms (amaze your friends by knowing what a clasping leaf is or by describing the sepal of your favorite flower) as well as an alphabetical list of flower families with their characteristics.

The very first time I went into the woods with this guide in Stowe, I found a bottle gentian along the trail. Be warned: not all wild flowers are beautiful, for example the common burdock, whose flowers become brown burrs that cling to the clothing, and touch-me-nots and chicory can be profuse, unsightly and weedy along the roadways.

How interesting that several of the flowers that appear in Carter's book (including the gentian) can be found in the poetry of Emily Dickinson. Of course, that's because she loved the flowers so much, and because her native Amherst is not far from Vermont's border with Massachusetts.

The flowers are waiting. Get this book and get out there.

Great identification tool but binding fails4
Wildflowers of Vermont makes identifying local flowers easy through color categories, brief descriptions, and notes of when and where the featured flower in the photograph was found.

It is a great tool to carry with Newcomb's Guide to Wildflowers. Some of the images in Wildflowers of Vermont can be mistaken for similar plants because the leaves are not always clear in the photographs. On the same note, Newcomb's can be overly detailed and difficult to navigate if one is not familiar with all of the plant terms. With both, identification is made much easier.

The one problem I have found with my copy of Wildflowers of Vermont, as well as several friends' copies, is that after one season of use, the pages fall out. I now carry mine in a ziplock bag and reorganize the forty pages or so that are tucked in because they can no longer be flipped through. I would highly recommend the book. Just use it with a very gentle hand.