Date: 3/15/26 9:39 am
From: Ragupathy Kannan <0000013b0ad14faf-dmarc-request...>
Subject: Re: Crip's relative is back (Fayetteville)
I was curious about the author and searched our group email.  Found this.  —————-

When I was much YOUNGER in the sixties I wrote Ruth Thomas about birding. I had three or four letters she wrote back to me and she encouraged me to join Arkansas Audubon Society. I'm very glad I did.  I'm not able to go now for health reasons but I still have memories of AAS and members in my heart. I gave these letters to Helen Parker to give to someone at U of A to put in the AAS archives. I hope she was abe to get the letters there.  
Terry Butler

Sent from my Galaxy Tab® S2
-------- Original message --------From: Carol Joan Patterson <0000003a0ccbe138-dmarc-request...> Date: 12/12/24 3:40 PM (GMT-06:00) To: <ARBIRD-L...>: Re: Ruth Thomas “Crip, Come Home” 
What a great find!  Thanks to all who shared material about this fine person.

On Thursday, December 12, 2024 at 09:56:39 AM CST, Sandy Berger <sndbrgr...> wrote:

Found this gem in a pile of discarded library books. You can read about Ruth on encyclopediaofarkansas.net  She was very influential in the Arkansas’ birding world in the 50’s and 60’s and I believe was one of the founders of the Arkansas Audubon Society. Joe Neal and Doug James are quoted in the article.Sandy BergerFort Smith


Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPad


On Sunday, March 15, 2026, 11:33 AM, Sandy Berger <sndbrgr...> wrote:

I have a copy. I got it either from the FS public library, or the Northside High School library, as a discard. I absolutely love it. 
Sandy B. 
On Sun, Mar 15, 2026 at 10:57 AM Ragupathy Kannan <0000013b0ad14faf-dmarc-request...> wrote:

$39 in Amazon
Crip, Come Home: The Story of a Bird Who Came to Stay https://a.co/d/09MMwcNf

Sent from Yahoo Mail for iPad


On Saturday, March 14, 2026, 11:08 AM, Lynn Risser <lynnkrisser...> wrote:

You can easily get Crip, Come Home with Abe's Books or Thriftbooks.  As one commentor said, it is an "endearing " read.  It is not sentimental, but it is, I agree, lovely.  It should be reprinted.
On Sat, Mar 14, 2026, 10:52 AM Joseph Neal <0000078cbd583d7c-dmarc-request...> wrote:

A Brown Thrasher is singing out in my yard this morning in Fayetteville. And right on time. They nest in my yard and often show up in second week of March.This annual event reminds me very much of Arkansas’s most famous Brown Thrasher – Crip, the thrasher that nested for many years at Morrilton in Ruth Thomas’s yard. She wrote a lovely book about Crip and the ecology of what she named Crip’s Hill.“Crip, Come Home” was published in 1950. Sections of this book first appeared in her columns in the old Arkansas Gazette. Her writings played an important role in founding of Arkansas Audubon Society.The book is out of print. But thrashers still return to our yards, as did Crip. The book is still a great read.


To unsubscribe from the ARBIRD-L list, click the following link:
http://listserv.uark.edu/scripts/wa-UARKEDU.exe?SUBED1=ARBIRD-L&A=1



To unsubscribe from the ARBIRD-L list, click the following link:
http://listserv.uark.edu/scripts/wa-UARKEDU.exe?SUBED1=ARBIRD-L&A=1





To unsubscribe from the ARBIRD-L list, click the following link:
http://listserv.uark.edu/scripts/wa-UARKEDU.exe?SUBED1=ARBIRD-L&A=1





############################

To unsubscribe from the ARBIRD-L list:
write to: mailto:<ARBIRD-L-SIGNOFF-REQUEST...>
or click the following link:
http://listserv.uark.edu/scripts/wa-UARKEDU.exe?SUBED1=ARBIRD-L&A=1

 
Join us on Facebook!