A Week in The Life of a Wildlife Writer

Ever wondered what life is like for a wildlife writer? In this article, Victoria Neblik describes one week in her life as a science and wildlife writer. She also discusses the writing process and gives insight into science writing as a career.

When asked about their work, people often say that there is no such thing as a typical day. I would say that, for me, there is no such thing as a typical week. My job involves several tasks but in some weeks I do one task to the virtual exclusion of all others. The main tasks in my line of work are strategic planning, writing, editing work I have previously written, doing research on the internet or in libraries or my own (fairly extensive) book collection, arranging and conducting interviews, taking wildlife photographs, e mail networking and pitching articles to  magazine editors and book proposals to book publishers. Generally I am based in the UK, but this week, I am back in Jerusalem for the first time in over a year. My visit is primarily to see friends, but, now that I am freelancing, I cannot afford to let such a golden work opportunity slip by.

Before I left Britain, I had all sorts of grand plans of what I would do on the aeroplane and how I would schedule my work and writing around times with friends, as one does. Of course all of that has fallen by the wayside now. After a week of much fun and little productivity, I am soon playing catch-up. My first port-of-call is the city’s botanic gardens. Having been there several times previously, I am familiar with the layout and hoping to add to my image database with photographs of some of the many wild birds that frequent the place. Really good images can be sold to various image libraries or compiled into books, but they can also serve as inspiration or illustration for an article on the animal pictured.

My guidebook says that, to date, some 46 bird species have been spotted in the botanic gardens. I have personally seen kingfishers, jays, white-eyed bulbuls, Palestinian sunbirds and many ring-necked parakeets but the guidebook also mentions purple herons, Nubian shrikes, lesser white throats etc. On this visit, I see a Syrian woodpecker (distinguishable from its European cousin- the Great Spotted Woodpecker- by the rhythm of its tapping) and several flashes of something I suspect may be white breasted kingfisher (another known visitor to these gardens).

As part of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the Botanic gardens has an active public education department; during this visit, there is an exhibition of botanical watercolours in one of the buildings and a seed- and postcard- stall manned by enthusiastic elderly ladies, who are somehow the same, the world over. I end up buying new guidebook on local butterflies for the pictures, since almost the entire text is in Hebrew….. Israel’s butterflies, much like its birds, are a mixture of familiar British and European species, with more exotic, Asiatic and African species and the odd endemic thrown in for good measure. Pictures of familiar British species like the red admiral and small skipper jostle for space in the book with more exotic variants like the Levantine Marbled White, Turkish Meadow Brown and species like the Large Salmon Arab. For the details of each species, I am reliant on the internet or Israeli friends translating the appropriate text. It is very strange, as a writer, to find myself in a land where I am functionally illiterate.

In the event, I do not see any butterflies but I do use two sets of batteries photographing plants and birds in the botanic gardens and surrounding area. I sort through the images that evening and update my blog-“weirdbeautiful”. I have recently started updating the blog in batches and automatic arranging time- release on articles, which is a great way to run any blog, as it regularises things and saves so much time.

The next day, I arrange interview with an eminent and well known British scientist/documentary maker for later in the week, then I search internet for information on the following interviewee. It takes more research and thought to prepare the right questions for an interview than I would ever have imagined before I started interviewing people regularly. My background as a research scientist is a huge help in terms of understanding the priorities of the scientists I interview, understanding the science and the contacts I made- rather than spending time searching for experts on the internet, I can often think very quickly of an ex-colleague who works in a particular field and then contact them to ask about- say- a news story in their subject area.

I finish my day by spending several hours adjusting the layout of my forthcoming book – an adapted form of my blog- also called “Weirdbeautiful”. The book is only about half finished and I am still trying to balance the aesthetic appeal (photographs) and the scientific content. The structure, and arrangement of a blog is very different from those of a book so developing one from the other is more of a challenge than it sounds.

The week ends with my conducting the interview that I arranged earlier in the week. Unlike my previous interviewees, today’s subject asked for a phone interview (rather than responding to a set of written questions). This is a skill I have yet to master. With the help of a friend, I spend an couple of hours working out how to do it and fiddling around with various recording devices and software packages. The interview will appear on paper but I cannot type fast enough to be sure of catching everything. The main problem is being able to record at a high enough volume for me to transcribe the audio files later. The volume is a problem- I have to strain to catch everything my subject says, but otherwise, the interview goes well and my subject is genial and informative. I have now to transcribe and edit (condense) his responses to fit my editor’s requirements.

Article written by Victoria Neblik. The moral right of Victoria Neblik to be acknowledged as the author of this article has been asserted by her in accordance with the copyrights designs and patents act, 1988.

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2 Responses to “A Week in The Life of a Wildlife Writer”

  • Emily Campbell
    October 19th, 2009 at 5:44 pm

    Very interesting read, gives quite the insight into the life of a wildlife writer, which I have yet encountered desribed in such a refreshingly honest and also very approachable manner. Looking forward to reading more of your work!

    - Emily Campbell

  • John M
    November 15th, 2009 at 12:39 pm

    Very interesting subject. I never stopped to consider the work of a wildlife writer before despite the fact that wildlife is a popular TV, magazine and book genre. It’s funny how fiction writers and political journalists hog more than their fair share of the limelight, often becoming more famous as personalities than for their writings, while science and wildlife writers, with two or three exceptions, remain as the lesser-spotted relations.

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