Saturday, June 9, 2012

The Adventure of Amelia Airheart Butterfly in bye bye Dragonfly Review

The Adventure of Amelia Airheart Butterfly in bye bye Dragonfly
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I absolutely love this story and the great values and character that it teaches! I have both this and Orville and just adore Donna's writing!

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Friday, June 8, 2012

Spinosad Garden Insect Spray 32 oz. by Monterey Review

Spinosad Garden Insect Spray 32 oz. by Monterey
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This product was very effective in stopping all damaging pests while keeping helpful pests alive. The bees working my plants continued to work them without interruption. Spray the product at sundown and it will wipe out all the bad plant eaters. I applied two treatments. Had I known about this product earlier in the year I could have saved the majority of the squash plants I had to destroy because of multiple worm issues. This is also the safest insecticide you can buy. I base that statement on many years as a professional pest control technician.

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Description: Spinosad is a relatively new insect killer that was discovered from soil in an abandoned rum distillery in 1982. Produced by fermentation, Spinosad can be used on outdoor ornamentals, lawns, vegetables and fruit trees, to control caterpillars, thrips, leafminers, borers, fruit flies, and more. Spinosad must be ingested by the insect, therefore it has little effect on sucking insects and non-target predatory insects. Spinosad is relatively fast acting. The pest insect dies within 1 to 2 days after ingesting the active ingredient. Will not persist in the environment. Sunlight and soil microbes break it down into carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen. Classified as an organic substance by the USDA National Organic Standards Board. OMRI Listed for use in organic production.Controls Moth and butterfly larva including Gypsy moth, codling moth, leaf miners, bagworms, tent caterpillars, borers, thrips, Colorado potato beetle larva, leafrollers, webworms, armyworms, sawflies, gall midges, whiteflies, stinkbugs, harlequin bugs, squash vine borer, fruit flies and more. Application Recommendations: MIXING AND APPLICATION (Shake well before use.) MONTEREY GARDEN INSECT SPRAY may be applied with trigger sprayer, hand-held, backpack, or hose-end sprayers. Use a hose-end sprayer that can be adjusted to provide a dilution ratio of about 2,0 fl. oz. (4 Tbs.) of MONTEREY GARDEN INSECT SPRAY per gallon of spray. See Hose-end Sprayer Directions below if this product is packaged in hose-end sprayer. Add the required amount of MONTEREY GARDEN INSECT SPRAY to the recommended amount of water, mix thoroughly, and apply uniformly to both upper and lower surfaces of plant foliage. It is recommended to mix only as much spray as needed for a single treatment. In vegetable gardens it is recommended to use not more than 3.0 gallons of spray for 1,000 square feet of area.

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I Thought I Swallowed a Honeybee * Pensé que me tragué una abeja Review

I Thought I Swallowed a Honeybee * Pensé que me tragué una abeja
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I am buying this book for my grandchildren, because of the name of Elayne Kuehler. She is a great artist - her landscapes are juried among the best 100 in the Paint America National Competition for 2009 and 2010. I recommend everybody to take a look at her art.

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Guess what can happen when you swing and sing! Bilingual children's story in English and Spanish.

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Thursday, June 7, 2012

Visual Encyclopedia of Animals Review

Visual Encyclopedia of Animals
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I have been searching for an animal encyclopedia and when I saw this I thought it was exactly what I was looking for. It covers the surface of animals, but it was not nearly as in depth as I was expecting.
If you're looking for a one-stop, everything-you-need book that covers it all, check out the Illustrated Encyclopedia of Animals by David Burnie. Unfortunately you can only get this from the UK, try Amazon.co.uk. It's so worth it.

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With more than 1,000 full-color photographs, diagrams, charts, cutaway drawings, and detailed illustrations in each book, DK¹s Visual Encyclopedias cover everything you¹ve ever wanted to know about animals, dinosaurs, and science.

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Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach Review

Animal Behavior: An Evolutionary Approach
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Every time I teach Animal Behaviour I swear that I am going to change texts "the next time" -and every time UNTIL NOW my students have said that they REALLY liked Alcock, well, the latest edition changes all that. As other reviewers have noted (and for reasons that escape me) Alcock has allowed his publisher to "dumb down" the text into a bland "pretty face" that turned students off in droves. As I moved through each chapter I kept thinking "How could someone as smart & interesting as Alcock make so many cool subjects so BORING?" Previous editions convince me that it ain't him, so it must be the publisher. Margins are huge, more and more gratuitous "illustrations" clutter up the text & break one's stream of thought, and by mid-term I essentially threw up my hands, apologized to the class & went to using the original primary sources with the book as a marginal reference for those that got lost. If you have a huge lecture course full of unimaginative students who want to take one & one only Behaviour course so that they can say that they have "done Behaviour" then this text is probably perfect for you, otherwise I would suggest haunting used book shops for past editions or going straight to the literature. the whole thing reminds me of "New Coke" -a marketing scheme that ignored its market. Alcock is an excellent scholar and in the past his book has been a great source of original material which I have encouraged my students to have on their shelves as a reference source,but this is a shame.

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It is distinguished by its balanced treatment of both the underlying mechanisms and evolutionary causes of behaviour, and stresses the utility of evolutionary theory in unifying the different behavioural disciplines. Important concepts are explained by reference to key illustrative studies, which are described in sufficient detail to help students appreciate the role of the scientific process in producing research discoveries. Examples are drawn evenly from studies of invertebrates and vertebrates, and are supported by nearly 1300 reference citations. The writing style is clear: beginning students should have no difficulty following the material, despite the strong conceptual orientation of the text.

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Wednesday, June 6, 2012

Butterflies of Southeastern Arizona Review

Butterflies of Southeastern Arizona
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Basics: 1991, softcover, 342 pages, 90 species in color, nearly 300 species in b&w, no range maps
Covering the southeast 1/6 of Arizona, this book illustrates and comments on nearly 300 species either found here or are suspected, possible, or claimed to occur here. Including two counties and portions of four others, this book focuses on a unique geographic area known for both its butterflies and birds.
As noted by the authors, this black-and-white book is meant to be used in tandem with other color field guides. All of the southeastern butterflies are illustrated with multiple (usually two) b&w photos. The two photos are typically dorsal and ventral and often of male and female. Four color plates showing dorsal views of 90 species are included in the appendices. The b&w photos create some difficulty with identification of some species, especially the blues and skippers where the shading and hues of the colors are important.
The text for each butterfly varies from one paragraph for vagrants to half a page for the expected species. Four categories are typically offered for each butterfly, which are: General, larval foodplant, flight period, and distribution. I've found the very brief descriptions mixed into the "General" section to be a bit too sparse at times and lacking sufficient comparative information between similar species. As an example, the only description offered for the Mylitta Crescent is "the nearly uniform orange DS ground color is usually diagnostic."
The format and content of this book seem to be a cross between a reference and a guide. It will be welcomed by more engaged butterfly enthusiasts but might be a little less friendly to a novice when trying to identify an unfamiliar specimen. This book certainly is a solid reference on AZ butterflies - and, the first to do so; however, I would recommend the more recent book, Butterflies of Arizona by Stewart and Brodkin if identification is the key focus.
I've listed several related books below...
1) Butterflies of Arizona: A Photographic Guide by Stewart et al.
2) Butterflies of North America by Brock/Kaufman
3) The Butterflies of North America by Scott
4) Butterflies through Binoculars: The West by Glassberg
5) National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Butterflies

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Serpent's Reach (Alliance-Union Universe) Review

Serpent's Reach (Alliance-Union Universe)
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Serpent's Reach has been cut off from contact with the rest of humanity for seven hundred years, and in that time, the settlers of these worlds have engineered fantastic technology with the help of the alien Majat. Against this backdrop, one noblewoman's family is slaughtered and she vows revenge on the perpetrators.
I've heard that CJ Cherryh does a fantastic job of creating believable aliens, and I found this to be true in my first-ever CJ Cherryh read. Not only the very alien Majat, but also the almost-human Kontrin and their genetic creations, the Betas and the Azi, have cultures, ideas, and attitudes that distinguish them from we garden variety Homo sapiens.
This is pretty "hard" science fiction, with frequent breaks needed to page back through what you just read to try and soak everything in. There is very little of the old literary trick of having an ignorant character around all the time so that difficult concepts can be explained in dialogue (like Star Trek) or even of outright exposition by the author. Much is left to the interpretation of the reader. If you like that style of writing (I do!), Serpent's Reach is excellent reading. After finishing, I went out and bought a couple more Cherryh books set in the Alliance-Union universe.

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Within the Constellation of the Serpent, out of bounds to all spacefarers, humans live among the insect-like aliens--and one of them, a woman named Paen, is bent on a revenge that will tear apart the truce between human and alien. "Brisk pacing . . . and genuinely brilliant world-building."--ALA Booklist. Reissue.

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