
Pflanzenleben in Feld Und Garten
Translated by Fritz, 1858- Kriete
A charming early 20th-century nature study that awakens children to the living world surrounding them. The book casts the young reader as an eager explorer, beckoning them from bed on summer mornings to witness the industrious drama unfolding in field and garden. Through intimate, conversational prose, Buckley introduces plants not as distant specimens but as active participants in a web of life: bees bundling pollen into tiny balls for their larvae, thrushes wrestling earthworms for their nestlings, and the curious shepherd's purse with its heart-shaped seed pods clinging to narrow partitions. Each lesson builds from observation to understanding, showing how plants grow, reproduce, and sustain the insects and birds that depend on them. The text encourages children to learn by doing, pulling weeds while discovering plant names, watching a woodpecker under the elm, opening a seed pod to find its hidden architecture. It endures not as a dry textbook but as an invitation: nature is accessible, fascinating, and waiting for anyone willing to look closely.














