Joe Hutto is the author of Illumination in the Flatwoods, which was made into the celebrated PBS Nature documentary, My Life as a Turkey, chronicling his exhaustive study of wild turkeys. He is also the author of The Light in High Places, an account of living alone in the high country of Wyoming observing the life of the Rocky Mountain bighorn sheep.
Touching the Wild: Living with the Mule Deer of Deadman Gulch
by Joe Hutto
eBook
-
ISBN-13:
9781628735536
- Publisher: Skyhorse Publishing
- Publication date: 04/01/2014
- Sold by: Barnes & Noble
- Format: eBook
- Pages: 320
- Sales rank: 410,148
- File size: 40 MB
- Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.
Available on NOOK devices and apps
Want a NOOK? Explore Now
Emmy Award–winning filmmaker, writer, and naturalist Joe Hutto has done it again. Touching the Wild is the enchanting story about one man who has lived with a herd of mule deer in the Wind River mountains of Wyoming for almost seven years. Why, you may ask, would a person choose to do such a thing? His response: how could you not? For Joe Hutto, close proximity to wild things is irresistible.
In Illumination in the Flatwoods he unveiled the secret lives of the wild turkey to great critical acclaim. In Touching the Wild he turns his acute sense of wonder and affinity to one of the West’s quintessential “big game” animals: the mule deer, a species in peril due to environmental factors.
Wily, thoughtful creatures, mule deer are not inclined to make foolish friendships with their primary predator—man. But due to the intense curiosity of one small doe, and the resulting introduction to an entire herd, Joe Hutto has been allowed unprecedented access and insight into the minds and behavior of this special animal. Spending every day among the herd, he develops uncanny connections with the deer, learning individual and group dynamics as well, unveiling just how much we have in common with these delicate beings.
Each season brings new joy as fawns are born and heartache as matriarchs pass away, or hunting takes its toll, or a fawn is orphaned. But what overwhelmingly emerges from Touching the Wild is the enormous respect Hutto has for all wild things and the recognition that we have so much to learn from them about their world, ourselves, and the fragile planet we share. Throughout the book are gorgeous full-color photos.
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
-
- Kindred Beings: What…
- by Sheri Speede
-
- Illumination in the Flatwoods:…
- by Joe Hutto
-
- The Ten Trusts: What We Must…
- by Jane GoodallMarc Bekoff
-
- The Hidden Life of Deer:…
- by Elizabeth Marshall Thomas
-
- The Daily Coyote: A Story of…
- by Shreve Stockton
-
- Never Cry Wolf
- by Farley Mowat
-
- A Book of Bees
- by Sue HubbellSam Potthoff
-
- Animal Camp: Lessons in Love…
- by Kathy Stevens
-
- The Whale: In Search of the…
- by Philip Hoare
-
- The Trees in My Forest
- by Bernd Heinrich
-
- Feathers: The Evolution of a…
- by Thor Hanson
-
- Build Me an Ark: A Life with…
- by Brenda Peterson
-
- A Country Year: Living the…
- by Sue HubbellLiddy Hubbell
-
- Dandelion Hunter: Foraging the…
- by Rebecca Lerner
-
- Gaining Ground: A Story of…
- by Forrest PritchardJoel Salatin
-
- Random Acts of Kindness by…
- by Stephanie LaLand