The Observologist – A handbook for mounting very small scientific expeditions is a highly illustrated, playful field guide for budding natural scientists and curious observers of the world right under our noses.
The author and illustrator of this book, Giselle Clarkson, 2023 Arts Foundation Illustration Laureate, writes below about her experience of being an observologist!
Anyone can be an observologist. The book describes an observologist as someone who makes scientific expeditions every day, albeit very small ones.
I’m absolutely fascinated by all the smallest details in nature. I especially love tiny invertebrates. I wrote this book because I want to share all my favourite things about them with other people.
I like to take photos of what I see, to remind myself of nice stuff I saw or to show to my friends. I have a LOT of photos that I’ve taken over the years of insects, spiders, worms, fungi and lichen. Quite a few of them ended up in The Observologist as drawings!
One day while I was working on my book I needed some new ideas and went outside for inspiration. I lifted up a huge plastic plant pot, expecting to find slaters, cockroaches and flatworms. Instead I found a baby sparrow! It was very cold, but still alive. I knew it was much too young to be out of its nest.
I put it in a warm, quite box and it soon let me know it was hungry. Feeding it was a full time job!
I felt proud every time it developed a new skill – hopping, preening, wiping its beak, singing new notes, pecking at food and stripping seeds from grass, and of course flying!
When it was ready, I took it out to the garden and opened the door of its cage. It flew off into the sky and I watched it until it became a dot, and then vanished.
My friends know that if we go for a walk together I will probably get a bit distracted…
The Observologist is available from all good bookstores and on our website.