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 Sunday, 5 September 2010
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BARNAWAPARA

Is it time for breakfast already, our elusive host asks?

Feeling hot, hot, hot! A refrain that naturally, reverberates around in your head if you are visiting Chhattisgarh’s beautiful Barnawapara Wildlife <p>Sanctuary at the height of a genuinely-Indian summer. Unfortunately, for a wildlife-lover, the soaring temperature was like a drug-addict’s dream-come-true! For then is when one gets to see what one is seeking, as Kalyan Patra realised, even as he had to take his ‘big-cat’-naps sweating! »»

BHARMOUR

Up close and powerful—the Baralach Range!

A rare employee might find it fit to complain but working in these surroundings is something Aparajita Mukherjee and Kalyan Patra would give at least one arm and a leg (each) to be able to do. On a visit to NHPC’s Chamera Power Plants, centered around Chamba in Himachal Pradesh, they discovered Dalhousie and Bharmour and a lot in between. »»

REFLECTING ON RANGANATHITTU

Uncommunicative looking Open-billed storks.

Having visited the Cauvery River for angling ourselves, it seemed like a conflict of interest to eulogise the birds there! They are competition after all—they are after the same fish! A case of ‘I have seen the enemy and they are—birds!’ They do not even release the fish after they catch them—can you believe their nerve? Deepankar Aron however, is an avid bird-lover and we do not customarily refuse such narrations! »»

PAY NOW, FLY LATER

A miniscule egg and a caterpillar not that much bigger.

If you envy those who can fly around, take a look at those who need to crawl around, against all odds, before they can take to the air. Hemant Kataria chronicles the travails of an Emigrant. »»

THE WHISPER OF WINGS

The colourful Blue-tailed bee-eater (Merops philip-pinus) is a near-passerine bird and belongs to the Bee-eater family Meropidae. These bee-eaters are gregarious, nesting colonially in sandy banks or open flat areas. »»

NIGHTLIFE IN THE THAR

Not many people realise how many lifeforms a desert can support. Fewer still could hope to see the number of types of bats that K R Senacha found in a variety of locations in the Thar Desert. Then again, he had gone looking for them—these were not the types to come running to him if he pointed a spotlight at some clouds! »»

MUKTESHWAR

Grey-hooded Warbler

When your desires peak for birds, a stunning view of the Himalayas might rate just a passing mention. In all fairness, Sheila Chhabra is a dedicated birder and she and her friends got to see more birds than they had hoped to. It is only natural that her memories of Mukteswar centre around them. »»

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