i was thinking of forking out the whopping £35 for the beginners guide to redfoots book by mike pingleton, does anyone have it and is it worth buying?
mintybum said:i do agree this forum is fabbo but theres something i love about books, i dont absorb the info as well on a screen
AnthonyC said:I completely understand. I'm quite fond of books myself. What the heck... go out & get the book! Splurge on yourself and your tort!!
mintybum said:i do agree this forum is fabbo but theres something i love about books, i dont absorb the info as well on a screen
mintybum said:AnthonyC said:I completely understand. I'm quite fond of books myself. What the heck... go out & get the book! Splurge on yourself and your tort!!
mintybum said:i do agree this forum is fabbo but theres something i love about books, i dont absorb the info as well on a screen
my husband says i splurge to much lol
mintybum said:i was about to say you but be a woman but with a name like Anthony..
anyway im way ahead of you and ive already emailed him saying it would help us with info etc etc, he's in Norway at the mo so I could just bung it on the shelf and say we've had it years lol.
oh but i'm giving all our secrets away ,..
Tortoise said:Its really good-you won't regret buying it. The best Red Foot resource I have!!!
cdmay said:I have it and consider it to be a valuable asset. I also like actually having a book in my hand but there are many equally useful sources online. The site, tortoiselibrary.com is another very well researched place to find practical and interesting information about red-foots.
Mgridgaway said:I thought I'd share this... Apparently a large portion of The Redfoot Manual is available to red on google books. There are a few sections omitted, but there's still a lot of good stuff!
http://books.google.com/books?id=WX94mktEL8oC&printsec=frontcover&source=gbs_atb#v=onepage&q&f=false