Edité par A.H.& A.W.Reed, U.S.A., 1979
ISBN 10 : 0589012169 ISBN 13 : 9780589012168
Vendeur : Edmonton Book Store, Edmonton, AB, Canada
Etat : Very Good. 8vo pp. 145, b/w photographs, ep maps. book.
Edité par Reed, Wellington, 1979
ISBN 10 : 0589012169 ISBN 13 : 9780589012168
Vendeur : BOPBooks, Tauranga, BOP, Nouvelle-Zélande
Hardcover. Etat : VG+. Etat de la jaquette : VG. Photos, Maps (illustrateur). 1st. Deer are an introduced species to New Zealand, the first of the Wapiti breed being released in wild, wet and rugged Fiordland. at the south-west extremity of the South Islands, in 1905. As the herd grew so did the expectations of deer stalkers ambitious to add a Wapiti head to their trophies. The author caught the hunting bug early and soon graduated from an air gun to a borrowed single barrel shotgun before up-gunning to a "ladies" single-shot 22 rifle while later came a 303 rifle and serious deer stalking could begin. At first this was in the hills and bush near his home at Upper Hutt. With an easy and enjoyable writing style the author covers his early hunting exploits before visiting Fiordland in search of the Wapiti. This was to become his favourite hunting ground, often spending several weeks in this wilderness area. Gradually he lost some of his zest for the hunt, moderating his kills and spending more time studying the wild environment and the creatures inhabiting it. This transition is recorded as well as his many experiences on the hunt, his thoughts on conservation, of maintaining the Wapiti herd when there were those who sought to exterminate it. His stalking recollections and viewpoints are of value and intererst as they cover the period when deer stalking evolved dramatically --- for instance reaching the hunting ground with light aircraft replacing foot-slogging and the advent of professional deer hunting from helicopters. Ray Tinsley presents a well-rounded story of huntiing while also expressing doubts about the future of the sport in NZ. First edition of 1977 from Reed, 145 pages, illustrated with 48 b/w photos, plus doublel spread photo title page, colour tone end-papers. Brown hard covers with gilt spine titles are VG+ with hint wear spine extremeties, light wear to lower corners, small and neat ink name top corner title page verso, text block otherwise excellent. Colour pictorial DJ (photo by L Turner) is VG with slight creasing top edge.
Edité par A.H. & A.W. Reed, Wellington, Sydney, London, 1979
Vendeur : The Book Shelf, Salem, OR, Etats-Unis
Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Near Fine. Etat de la jaquette : Near Fine. First Edition. Former owner's name on front pastedown, mostly hidden by dust jacket flap.
Edité par A.H. & A.W. Reed Ltd., 1979
ISBN 10 : 0589012169 ISBN 13 : 9780589012168
Vendeur : Phoenix Books NZ, Waimate, CANTE, Nouvelle-Zélande
Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Good. Etat de la jaquette : Good. 1st Edition. Call of the Wapiti By Ray Tinsley. Publisher: AH & AW Reed, Wellington, 1979, First Edition. Good hardback with jacket, no inscriptions. Brown cloth boards have some rubbing to edges and a couple of dints to bottom edge. Pages are very good with foxing to closed edge and minor marks. Jacket has some chipping and fading to spine. 146 pages, illustrated. Deer are an introduced species to New Zealand, the first of the Wapiti breed being released in wild, wet and rugged Fiordland. at the south-west extremity of the South Islands, in 1905. As the herd grew so did the expectations of deer stalkers ambitious to add a Wapiti head to their trophies. The author caught the hunting bug early and soon graduated from an air gun to a borrowed single barrel shotgun before up-gunning to a "ladies" single-shot 22 rifle while later came a 303 rifle and serious deer stalking could begin. At first this was in the hills and bush near his home at Upper Hutt. With an easy and enjoyable writing style the author covers his early hunting exploits before visiting Fiordland in search of the Wapiti. This was to become his favourite hunting ground, often spending several weeks in this wilderness area. Gradually he lost some of his zest for the hunt, moderating his kills and spending more time studying the wild environment and the creatures inhabiting it. This transition is recorded as well as his many experiences on the hunt, his thoughts on conservation, of maintaining the Wapiti herd when there were those who sought to exterminate it. His stalking recollections and viewpoints are of value and interest as they cover the period when deer stalking evolved dramatically --- for instance reaching the hunting ground with light aircraft replacing foot-slogging and the advent of professional deer hunting from helicopters. Ray Tinsley presents a well-rounded story of hunting while also expressing doubts about the future of the sport in NZ.
Edité par A. H. & A. W. Reed (1979), Wellington, 1979
ISBN 10 : 0589012169 ISBN 13 : 9780589012168
Vendeur : Renaissance Books, ANZAAB / ILAB, Dunedin, Nouvelle-Zélande
Edition originale
Hardcover. Etat : Very Good. Etat de la jaquette : Very Good. First Edition. No signatures. Some rubbing to corners of dust-jacket. Dust-jacket protected in archival mylar cover. ; xiii, [1], 145, [1] pages. Brown boards with gilt lettering on spine. Page dimensions: 212mm x 135mm. "This is the story of how Ray Tinsley grew up as a hunter. As a boy living in Upper Hutt he used to shoot just about anything that moved: rabbits, opposums, birds of all kinds - even the occasional cat!" - from dust-jacket blurb.
Edité par Reed, 1991
ISBN 10 : 0790000989 ISBN 13 : 9780790000985
Vendeur : Brused Books, Pullman, WA, Etats-Unis
Soft cover. Etat : Very Good. 1991 printing. Solid, clean paperback with slight wear to cover. No marks or names inside.