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[.ca] The ROM Field Guide to Wildflowers of Ontario (ISBN 0771076525)



There are many better books:
Although the key at the front of the book is an interesting twist on the standard plant identification key, I found it was really no easier to use. All in all I was very disappointed with the ROM field guide to wildflowers of Ontario. I have long loved the ROM field guide to Shrubs of Ontario and expected the same calibre in this. In fact I have always felt the Shrubs of Ontario was one of the best designed field guides I have used. I'm glad I didn't order the ROM guides to birds, and to reptiles and amphibians as they look like the same format as the wildflower guide. The big problem is the photos. They are very small, many are very dark and hard to see detail, and several appear fuzzy and out of focus. For example, the pictures of tall wormwood (and there are 3 of them) could be mistaken for any number of plants at various stages of maturity. There is no detail drawing or even close-up photo of the leaf. Two pages away, I did not even recognize the mossy stonecrop - and I grow lots of it in my garden. And there are many, many more just as confusing or hard to see. Another disappointment is the lack of natural history or anecdotal information about the plants. That part of the shrubs guide made the plant more interesting. And I was really disappointed that the guide does not let you know which wildflowers are native and which are "imported". If you want a good general guide to wildflowers in Ontario, stick with Peterson's or Newcomb's. A great little book, though not as extensive as either of those two, is Ontario Wildflowers: 101 Wayside Flowers by Linda Kershaw. It's only drawback is the limited number or plants it identifies. If the ROM guide had been this page size and format, with the same kind of big, clear photos as Kershaw's book, it could have been a winner. In the end, I feel the ROM Guide to Wildflowers of Ontario has very little to commend it. I am wondering if my 2 stars may have been generous.


Detailed but difficult to use:
Tbis is a wonderfully detailed book on wildflowers, but for someone just beginning it is necessary to learn much more about flower structure and classification than a beginner,like myself, finds comfortable or easy. Although not as detailed, the book "Ontario Wildflowers: 101 Wayside Flowers" is much simpler to use, and vastly superior for the beginner.


great book:
It takes a little bit of getting used to, but this book will more than reward your effort. With a little practice, using the identification keys up front and the well-presented introductory text and diagrams, you learn to pay attention to how a wildflower plant is actually constructed (the composition of flowers, leaves, stems, etc) and are soon looking at new finds with the trained eye of a botanist. The result is, you can begin to zero in on a much more dependable identification than you would get with other, "more simple" guides. And it's fun! The colour photos are excellent -- more than 1000 of them -- there are distribution maps on every page, and too many other bells and whistles to count. Worth every penny.


Author:Richard Dickinson
Author:Tim Dickinson
Author:Deborah Metsger
Binding:Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number:582.1309713
EAN:9780771076527
ISBN:0771076525
Number Of Pages:416
Publication Date:2004-06-08
Release Date:2004-05-04



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