Leader Spotlight: Scott Weidensaul
Oct 18, 2015 | by Kevin Loughlin
Born in 1959, Scott Weidensaul (pronounced “Why-densaul”) has lived almost all of his life among the long ridges and endless valleys of eastern Pennsylvania, in the heart of the central Appalachians, a landscape that has defined much of his work.
His writing career began in 1978 with a weekly natural history column in the local newspaper, the Pottsville Republican in Schuylkill County, Pennsylvania, where he grew up. The column soon led a fulltime reporting job, which he held until 1988, when he left to become a freelance writer specializing in nature and wildlife. (He continued to write about nature for newspapers, however, including long-running columns for the Philadelphia Inquirer and Harrisburg Patriot-News.)
Weidensaul has written more than two dozen books, including his widely acclaimed Living on the Wind: Across the Hemisphere with Migratory Birds (North Point 1999), which was a finalist for the 2000 Pulitzer Prize.
His latest book is the Peterson Reference Guide to Owls of North America and the Caribbean, to be published in autumn 2015 [IN WHICH WILDSIDE’S OWNER, KEVIN LOUGHLIN, HAS ABOUT A DOZEN IMAGES!].
In 2012 he published The First Frontier: The Forgotten History of Struggle, Savagery and Endurance in Early America (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt), which tells the ambitious story of the earliest contacts between Natives and Europeans along the Eastern seaboard – two and half centuries of conflict and coexistence that forever shaped what would become America.
Other recent titles include Return to Wild America: A Yearlong Search for the Continent’s Natural Soul (North Point 2005), an ambitious journey to take the pulse of America’s wildlife and wildlands; and Of a Feather: A Brief History of American Birding (Harcourt 2007) which traces 400 years of ornithological history.
Weidensaul’s writing has appeared in dozens of publications, including Audubon (for which he is a contributing editor), Nature Conservancy and National Wildlife, among many others. He lectures widely on conservation and nature, and directs the ornithological programs for National Audubon’s famed Hog Island Center on the coast of Maine.
In addition to writing about wildlife, Weidensaul is an active field researcher whose work focuses on bird migration. He is a co-director of Project Owlnet, a collaborative effort among nearly 125 banding and research stations across North America studying owl migration, and for nearly 20 years he has directed a major effort to study the movements of northern saw-whet owls, one of the smallest and least-understood raptors in North America.
Weidensaul co-founded Project SNOWstorm, which uses cutting-edge tracking technology to study snowy owls, and is a founder of the Critical Connections project, which is tracking the migration of birds that breed on National Park lands in Alaska. He is also part of a continental effort to understand the rapid evolution, by several species of western hummingbirds, of a new migratory route and wintering range in the East.
Scott and Amy will be leading the following trips with Kevin Loughlin: