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Pests
Pests: How Humans Create Animal Villains | Bethany Brookshire
11 posts | 6 read | 11 to read
An engrossing and revealing study of why we deem certain animals pests and others notfrom cats to rats, elephants to pigeonsand what this tells us about our own perceptions, beliefs, and actions, as well as our place in the natural world A squirrel in the garden. A rat in the wall. A pigeon on the street. Humans have spent so much of our history drawing a hard line between human spaces and wild places. When animals pop up where we dont expect or want them, we respond with fear, rage, or simple annoyance. Its no longer an animal. Its a pest. At the intersection of science, history, and narrative journalism, Pests is not a simple call to look closer at our urban ecosystem. Its not a natural history of the animals we hate. Instead, this book is about us. Its about what calling an animal a pest says about people, how we live, and what we want. Its a story about human nature, and how we categorize the animals in our midst, including bears and coyotes, sparrows and snakes. Pet or pest? In many cases, its entirely a question of perspective. Bethany Brookshires deeply researched and entirely entertaining book will show readers what there is to venerate in vermin, and help them appreciate how these animals have clawed their way to success as we did everything we could to ensure their failure. In the process, we will learn how the pests that annoy us tell us far more about humanity than they do about the animals themselves.
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Pedrocamacho
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Pickpick

This book is great. It is not a list of animals considered to be pests. It is about how humans create pests through definition, expectations, inaction, and carelessness. That perspective showed up almost on the first page and the author takes her time making her case.

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mcctrish
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This solitary coneflower, first time blooming since I planted it ages ago. We got new gates and partial horizontal fence put it on either side of our yard and I thought I had the rabbit problem solved 💪🏻 until the baby bunnies were born and hopped through the chain link fence. So all my pollinators got decimated. I know my anger and frustration is irrational, especially compared to what elephants do in Africa, but this book gets me ❤️❤️

TheBookHippie I love those flowers… 1y
mcctrish @TheBookHippie every day this sweet cone lost another bloom to those effing bunnies, every day more curses, counting the days until school was finally effing done and I could work on my ‘fence‘ 1y
TheBookHippie @mcctrish 😵‍💫 I didn‘t have weather up garden until school was done this year seems to have worked out! 😅 1y
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Tamra The deer and rabbit spray has worked for me to prevent mainly the deer (Bambi menace) from eating my potted flowers. Here they come right up to the house & porch - like the welcome mat is for them. 😆 (edited) 1y
mcctrish @Tamra the fence isn‘t working, I just found two bunnies in my yard 🤬 we have had SO MUCH rain I haven‘t used the spray all week because it just washes off. Something, chipmunks I think, ate all of my pansies from the pots 😖 1y
Tamra @mcctrish ugh - I feel for you. 😖 1y
40 likes6 comments
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mcctrish
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It‘s my 25th anniversary today and the biblical rains that have fallen for 2 days have finally stopped so I‘m back at installing my baby bunny deterrent. It is silver in colour so I am totally following the old fashioned gift guide #imlivinganextremelyglamorouslife #dontbejealous

Deblovestoread Happy Anniversary 🥂 1y
robinb Happy Anniversary! 💕 1y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks Happy Anniversary ❤️ 1y
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Ruthiella Happy Anniversary! 🍾🥂❤️ 1y
DivineDiana Best wishes! 💖 1y
DHill Happy Anniversary! 1y
mcctrish Thanks you so much for all the anniversary wishes @Deblovestoread @robinb @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks @Ruthiella @DivineDiana @DHill I wore myself right out with that damn fence so it‘s a quiet night with takeout and catching up on reading ❤️❤️ we can be fancy another night 1y
41 likes7 comments
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mcctrish
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This came ready for me to listen to at the perfect time, I am currently battling the baby bunnies WHO ARE DESTROYING MY POLLINATOR GARDEN!!! The bunnies have done nothing for me! The pollinators are life! #justcallmeelmerfudd #killthewabbit

Soubhiville I have accepted that I can never have certain plants due to bunnies. This is the second year they ate my coneflowers, and last year they ate about half of what I tried to grow. Even things the nurseries told me were supposed to be bunny-proof. 😔 So I don‘t feel too bad when my dog chases them- as long as she doesn‘t actually get them. (It has happened a few times.) 1y
mcctrish @Soubhiville the CONEFLOWERS!!! My god they have been destroyed 😩😩 if the bunnies would just eat all of the damn flowers I‘d almost be okay with it, but it‘s just carnage and destruction left in their wake 🤬 they bite and toss! I‘m totally okay with your dog biting and tossing ✊🏻( my neighbour keeps telling me to track the carnage and only buy what the bunnies leave alone - but how do I know beforehand 🤷🏻‍♀️) 1y
Soubhiville I asked at the nursery when buying baby plants, then when I realized that wasn‘t working I went to the internet. There are lots of articles about plants the rabbits don‘t like. I‘ve had good luck this year with Salvia, some flowering sages, verbena and Lantana, black eyed susans- they nibble it but don‘t eat it all, maybe because the stems are very hairy?, and Mexican Heather. Last year the only thing they left alone was periwinkle. 1y
mcctrish @Soubhiville bunnies have mowed my black eyed Susan‘s down, exactly the same as the cone flowers - they do leave lavender and daisies alone ( although the babies this year have been attacking the daisies ) hostas they leave alone once they get grown BUT it depends on type of hosta and bunny ( periwinkle is considered invasive here so I have steered clear of it) 1y
35 likes2 stack adds4 comments
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eol
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Pickpick

This is a very interesting book about anthropocentrism and, generally, our perspective on nature.

A rat was always a pest, right? Or a pidgeon, or a dirty raccoon in your trash, or an invasive python. But what about a cat, a deer, an elephant? Because cats have driven dozens of bird species to extinction, deers destroy crops, and it‘s not that uncommon for elephants to kill people.

What really makes a pest?

Spoiler alert: we do.

4/5

14 likes1 stack add
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Lindy
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It‘s all about perception: “the word ‘pest‘ takes away context & complexity, shuts down our curiosity, our desire to look for other angles or solutions.” This audiobook offers an engaging look at the way humans look at animals who refuse to stay where we think they belong.

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Lindy
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Maremma dogs with the right training will defend almost anything. Maremmas are famous in Australia for defending the little penguins of Middle Island from foxes.

Lindy My sister has used maremmas to protect her cashmere goats from predators, and I visited a farm where these dogs protected a flock of 90 geese. 2y
24 likes1 comment
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Lindy
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Peter Marra, who wrote Cat Wars, received death threats when it came out in 2016. The irony of people who hate the idea of killing cats threatening a scientist with death escapes neither of us.

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Lindy
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The whole idea of pigeons degrading masonry was just something people said without any evidence.

19 likes1 stack add
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Hooked_on_books
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Pickpick

There is really no such thing as a true pest, simply animals that we have deemed undesirable. Pests explores this concept, looking at animals that won‘t surprise anyone (rats) and others that will (elephants, cats, horses), with humor that didn‘t always hit for me (not sure if this was the writing or the slightly chirpy audio reader). Overall, I really enjoyed this.

keithmalek You might also enjoy "Fuzz: When Nature Breaks the Law" by Mary Roach. 2y
Hooked_on_books @keithmalek Yes, that‘s one‘s great! 2y
49 likes3 stack adds2 comments
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Megabooks
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I got major Mary Roach vibes from Brookshire‘s look at 10+ animals that can be seen as pests in various parts of the world. With a particular focus on the US and Australia, she looks at bears, deer, and coyote in the former plus cats and rabbits in the latter. She examines what turns an animal from cute and cuddly friend to enemy as well as habitat destruction by introduced species. Very interesting! 👍🏻

SamAnne Stacked!! 2y
Megabooks @SamAnne awesome! It was very interesting. 2y
SamAnne @megabooks it‘s so complicated and people have strong feelings about the issue. Including me. I love our neighborhood coyotes. They eat the feral cats that overrun our neighborhood. The cats kill native birds. I work hard to create and protect habitat in my yard for those birds. My border collie is trained to chase all cats off property (he does not hurt cats tho!). Look forward to this read. 2y
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Cinfhen Interesting but not for me xxx 2y
Megabooks @SamAnne yes, she talks about your specific situation I believe. She also talks about competing priorities in neighborhoods, which often causes problems. 2y
Megabooks @Cinfhen I wouldn‘t have recommended this particular book to you. 😘😘 2y
Megabooks @Cinfhen just tagging you for thoroughness. 💜💜 2y
Cinfhen And I appreciate your diligence xxxx 2y
87 likes6 stack adds8 comments