The nature instinct Relearning our lost intuition for the inner workings of the natural world

Tristan Gooley

Book - 2018

Explores the "sixth sense," a subconscious, deeper understanding of surroundings, and explains how humans can train themselves to unlock this intuition using slow, careful observation.

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2nd Floor 796.5/Gooley Due Nov 27, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : The Experiment 2018.
Language
English
Main Author
Tristan Gooley (author)
Other Authors
Neil Gower (illustrator)
Physical Description
xvii, 361 pages : illustrations ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 311-334) and index.
ISBN
9781615194797
  • Introduction
  • Part I. Ancient and New
  • Wild Signs and Star Paths I
  • The Sun Anvil
  • Wild Signs and Star Paths II
  • The Wind Anchor
  • Wild Signs and Star Paths III
  • Part II. Above and Below: Sky and Land
  • The Shear
  • The Ramp
  • The Pink Compass
  • The Sky Map
  • The Invisible Handrail
  • The Light and Dark Woods
  • The Edge and Musit
  • The Fire
  • The Browse, Bite, and Haven
  • The Celebration and Shadow
  • The Friend, Guest, and Rebel
  • The Reaper
  • Part III. Creatures of Meaning: The Animals
  • The Perch and Sentinel
  • The Return
  • The Face and Tail
  • The Point
  • The Peek
  • The Freeze, Crouch, and Feign
  • The Flight
  • The Refuge
  • The Cacophony
  • The Track
  • The Circling
  • The Slotting
  • The Guide
  • The Squall Squawk
  • Part IV. Signs of Wisdom: Advanced Keys
  • Flock, Bubble, and Burst
  • The Retreat and Rebound
  • The Jink
  • The Shimmy
  • The Ignore and Mistake
  • The Eddy
  • The Crook
  • Nature's Coat
  • Two Frosts
  • The Clepsydra
  • Part V. A World of Signs: Digging Deeper
  • Labels That Come to Life
  • Three Luminaries
  • A Noble Pursuit
  • Tomorrow's Hunter
  • More Than Machines
  • Umwelt
  • Treachery
  • A Storied Creature
  • The Ikus
  • Part VI. Epilogue
  • The Room
  • Notes and Further Reading
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
  • About the Author
Review by Choice Review

Much of this volume resembles a diary, charting the author's getting up, going out and later coming back, and recounting the things observed during the day. These could be a walk, a negative experience, watching what happens with the plants and animals encountered. The diary entries are built up by material from references or by later and similar encounters. The common theme is to watch and learn without interfering with nature. Gooley, a writer and independent scholar, likes to think and describe the way surroundings affect behavior, time of day, amount of light, and weather. He also discusses circadian rhythms. Gooley's goal with this book is to prompt readers to relearn their ability to analyze the world around them in order to better see or understand the whole. He supports this objective with a range of personal experiences in various settings, bringing examples from other cultures to support his thesis. He believes these perceptive abilities are innate, but often rusty from lack of use; the key to reviving them is activities like forest walking, sitting and observing one's surroundings. A artful yet practical guide to better understanding nature. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers. --Francis W. Yow, emeritus, Kenyon College

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With the promise of fostering a level of awareness so rarefied as to be a "sixth sense," Cooley (How to Read Nature) takes readers on a journey to acquaint them with the sounds and signs of nature. Using information gleaned from a "lifelong pursuit of outdoors awareness," Cooley shares the enriching "outdoor skills" that, like any skills, he promises, can be improved with practice. Cooley's lessons, of course, require many quiet and attentive walks in nature, but he shows that the lessons are there for those willing to spend the time. Readers learn the "browse, bite and haven" clues left by rabbits and deer so they can see animals in places overlooked before, anticipate the next move of animals as they head for cover, or pay attention when songbirds issue an alarm. Even the patterns that a flock of sheep gather in have stories to tell. As the lessons become more challenging and signs more subtle-anticipating seasonal changes, for instance, or assessing the age of a hedge-the rewards are there for those willing to learn the lessons provided in this detailed and lovely book. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Gooley (The Lost Art of Reading Nature's Signs) continues sharing his life's work of decoding nature's signs. Here, he differentiates between slow thinking (characterized by comparison, calculation, or deliberate choices) and fast thinking (subconsciously reading signs through experience), teaching readers how to develop their fast thinking skills. While some people still use these skills to navigate the world, most of us do not have this ability. Using examples mainly from his home in rural England, Gooley instructs how to navigate using the sun, constellations, or even plants; anticipating the actions of animal species and determining habitat types through plant species. VERDICT Gooley presents a personal, well-researched, and fascinating look at immersing oneself in nature and understanding what one sees. It serves as a nice companion to his previous work.-Sue O'Brien, Downers Grove, IL © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

It all comes down to paying attention: Naturalist Gooley (How to Read Nature, 2017, etc.) writes affectingly of how to recapture our ability to live in the real world with senses "almost forgotten and steamrollered by our modern lifestyle."If you scare a fish, which way will it dart? That's the kind of thing you might find highly useful to know if you lived near a stream and far from any other source of provisions. It's also the kind of thing you're not likely to know unless you've logged time splashing around with startled fish, which is where wilderness guide and interpreter Gooley comes in. "I have sat with Dayak tribespeople," he writes with luminous awe, "as they explained that a deer would appear over the brow of a hill, and was amazed moments later when my eyes met those of a muntjac in the predicted spot." How would a Dayak know the exact moment when a deer would emerge? Sight, sound, smelland perhaps the law of probability, which suggests that a deer might appear at a salt lick or creek within a certain range of times over another range of times. Other lessons the author brings back from the wild include how to know when a leopard is watching you and how to know when one of those aforementioned deer is pretty sure you're not going to catch it. Of course, even the most attentive predator is successful only a small percentage of the time, but knowing that is part of knowing the world, too. Gooley's book, which features occasional illustrations by Gower, is a useful owner's manual for anyone who likes to get outdoors and be immersed in something beyond the asphaltwhether part of an eddy in which "our scent is announcing our presence to any animal with a nose" or someone merely appreciative of the fact that vultures can discern the living from the dead from two miles away.A welcome read for the outdoor inclined. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.