Rick and Elis at their Glbal Birdfair stand |
Their charity campaigns vigorously to highlight the threats posed by most, if not all, shorebirds from habitat loss, climate change, predation and much else.
Rick's varied working life in the past has included spells as a firefighter, a gardener, a security guard, an estate agent, an articulated lorry driver and a birding tours guide in Brazil.
Now based in the UK with Brazilian-born Elis, also a keen birder, Rick's love of waders was initially sparked by his childhood encounter with a picture of a lapwing that so fascinated him that he decided it was a bird he had to see.
Much later, the focus of his fascination fell on another magical but much rarer species - the spoon-billed sandpiper of which the global population may now be fewer than 100 pairs.
Back in 2012, this was the top target species when Rick and decided to sell up and travel the world, seeking both to see as many shorebirds species as possible and to fund-raise for conservation of this varied and delightful group of birds.
That experience-packed trip is the subject of an absorbing book, A Quest for Waders, which recounts the highs and lows of their travels.
Briskly written and bursting with amusing anecdotes and fascinating wader information, plus scores of superb illustrations, it makes for a compelling read.
Indeed, it as much a page-turner as any detective thriller.
Rick’s passion for his mission radiates from every page, no more so than when he and Elis share their thrilling first encounter with 'spoonies' in Thailand.
Taking up the story, he writes: "Fortunately for us, the bird both breathed and moved - indeed, it turned out there were several of them scattered liberally around the area.
"Hardly able to believe our luck, we watched gleefully as these busy birds tripped back and forth across the ground in short bursts."
A Quest for Waders is now on sale, price £15, plus p&p, via the Wader Quest website, www.waderquest.net, with every penny of proceeds going to support wader conservation initiatives all over the world.
Spelling it out - waders need every bit of help they can get |
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