Kenn Kaufman (born 1954) Kenn Kaufman is a legend among birders and since the death of Roger Tory Peterson in 1996, has perhaps done more than any other single human being to promote the appreciation of birds and nature. A birder and naturalist since childhood, he left home at the age of sixteen to begin an 80,000-mile cross-country journey aimed at breaking the record for most avian species sightings in a single year. Those travels were just the beginning; since that time he has led nature tours on all seven continents. A longtime friend and disciple of the late eminent birder Roger Tory Peterson, Kaufman is a field editor for Audubon magazine and a regular contributor to every major birding magazine. He is the youngest person ever to receive the highest honor of the American Birding Association, and he has been voted to elective membership in the prestigious American Ornithologists’ Union. His books include Lives of North American Birds, Kingbird Highway, The Peterson Field Guide to Advanced Birding, and his own Kaufman Field Guide Series (on North American birds, butterflies, mammals, and insects). From
Kenn's
Blog: Kenn's wife
On the same theme as Birding on Borrowed Time, Kenn's book tells about his
obsession with birding, and how at the age of 16 he dropped out of school
to hit the road and travel the USA for a year, to see as many bird species
as he could.
Kenn has authored several birding books and is a regular contributor to American Birding magazines. Kingbird Highway by Kenn Kaufman Houghton Mifflin, 1997 ISBN 0-395-77398-9 (hardback) |