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Travel Ontario

The Complete Up North

A Guide to Ontario's Wilderness from Black Flies to the Northern Lights

by (author) Doug Bennet & Tim Tiner

illustrated by Marta Scythes

Publisher
McClelland & Stewart
Initial publish date
Apr 2010
Category
Ontario, Ecology, Lakes, Ponds & Swamps
  • Paperback / softback

    ISBN
    9780771011412
    Publish Date
    Apr 2010
    List Price
    $29.99

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Description

A newly updated and expanded edition of the bestselling Up North books, this is an entertaining guide to Ontario's north for every cottager, camper, and nature lover.
Have you ever wondered how porcupines procreate? Or where you can best see the northern lights? Or how many fireflies it takes to equal the light of a 40-watt bulb? The answers to these questions — and many, many more — are in this lively and indispensable field guide to the plants and animals of Ontario's wilderness.

Filled with amusing trivia, easy-to-understand natural history, and little-known folklore, The Complete Up North is the perfect introduction and companion to Ontario's great outdoors. Naturalists Doug Bennet and Tim Tiner answer those questions we have always wanted to ask — and many others we wish we'd thought to ask — about plants, mammals, birds, fish, insects, reptiles, clouds, the night sky, the weather, and the ground we walk on. Their infectious curiosity makes Up North as fun and interesting to read as it is useful to pack for a hike into the woods.

About the authors

Contributor Notes

DOUG BENNET and TIM TINER are the authors of the bestselling guidebooks to Ontario's wilderness Up North and Up North Again. Veteran birders, canoers, and campers, they are members of the Federation of Ontario Naturalists. When they are not out hiking in the bush, both of them live in Toronto.

MARTA SCYTHES is a fine artist, medical illustrator, and educator. Her work has been published by Harrowsmith Magazine and The Canadian Encyclopedia. She is featured in Canadian Geographic's "TransCanada Trail" guides and The Canadian Medical Association Magazine. She currently teaches at Fleming College and at the Haliburton School of the Arts.

Excerpt: The Complete Up North: A Guide to Ontario's Wilderness from Black Flies to the Northern Lights (by (author) Doug Bennet & Tim Tiner; illustrated by Marta Scythes)

INTRODUCTION


Who would have thought a 1989 conversation around a campfire in Algonquin Park would lead to this, The Complete Up North, the fifth book in a loose series sparked by simple curiosity about the world around us “up north.”

This book is both a compilation of the best from the first two books, Up North and Up North Again, and also an update based on the many natural changes and scientific advancements since those titles were published in the 1990s. Just two examples: in our early books, there was nary a mention of double-breasted cormorants. But the waterfowl’s population has since exploded, and now the black bird – love it or hate it – merits its own entry. And in our Night Sky section, many entries have been updated to reflect mind-bending advances in astronomical research and even bureaucratic redefinitions: Pluto’s not even a planet anymore, technically speaking.

But the basic premise of The Complete Up North remains the same: it is an attempt to answer, from a sense of wonder, a good number of the questions prompted by our experiences in the woods and wilderness when we go up north.

As much as possible, The Complete Up North aims to incorporate the whole outdoor experience – from the bugs that pester to the northern lights that dance across the night sky. We have concentrated on the most commonly seen or experienced species and phenomena in central Ontario, as they are what occupy your immediate attention most of the time when camping or visiting the cottage.

By central Ontario, we refer to the vast, mixed-forest hinterland from the Rideau Lakes, Kawarthas and Bruce Peninsula on to the rocky Canadian Shield as far as the Temagami and Mississagi Provincial Park areas – the “up north” for millions of Ontarians. Although much of the guide’s information applies as well to other parts of the country, including far northern Ontario and much of Quebec, we have sought, by concentrating on this specific region, to give as complete a picture as possible within the space of the book.

As in the earlier books, we have arranged the entries in a way that we hope is useful to readers. There are four main chapters: Animal Kingdom, Plant Kingdom, The Heavens, and Mother Earth. Each chapter is further divided into subsections, such as Birds within the Animal Kingdom. Finally, within each subsection, individual entries are arranged alphabetically. An index is also included.

Being journalists ourselves, rather than scientists, we have endeavoured to be accurate while avoiding a strict scientific or academic tone in these pages. Our intent is to answer the many questions of campers and cottagers in the same spirit in which they are asked. If we anthropomorphize, it is because that is what people tend to do when they talk about and relate to nature around them. We have tried, however, to ensure that a sense of fun does not distort the true nature of the subject.

We hope The Complete Up North informs and entertains a new generation of cottagers, campers and hikers – while replacing our first readers’ dog-eared copies with a fresh, updated edition.

Doug Bennet
Tim Tiner

To learn more about The Complete Up North and other books by the authors, please visit www.upnorthguides.com.

Editorial Reviews

Praise for the Up North books:
"Entertaining enough to read from cover to cover at one sitting…. A mini-encyclopedia of fascinating information."
Globe and Mail
"A delightful variation on the nature guidebook…. Warmly recommended."
NOW magazine

"[The authors] weave information into wonderfully readable and often humorous packages."
Canadian Geographic
"Entertaining. . . . Highly readable … a welcome addition to any cottage library."
Nature Canada
"Jammed with useful information…. [A] delightful book."
London Free Press
"Next time you're in the woods, you will look around with a little more awe."
Toronto Sun

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