Monday, November 03, 2008

Birds of a feather...

PS: Click on pictures to enlarge and make out details better!

The wife and I decided to give vent to the nature-loving beings hidden within each of us, and took off on a weekend trip to the Bharatpur bird sanctuary one cool October Saturday. The 190km drive from Delhi was a breeze, with the NH2 allowing us to cruise along at >100kmph quite easily.

The Bharatpur bird sanctuary is spread over an area of 29 sq km, most of it marshland. For the past 5 years, little rain had almost dried the place up, with the result that most migratory birds had given the place a miss, but good rain in June this year ensured a record turnout from our feathered friends (some of them flying in all the way from Egypt!). Aug-Oct is usually peak season for Indian birds in Bharatpur, and Oct-Jan for foreign birds, so October was witness to a happy confluence of both types.

We had booked ourselves into the ITDC resort within the sanctuary, and it was quite good, reasonable, clean and with good service. We set off at 6am sharp, armed somewhat inadequately with a toy binoculars that the wife had dug out from her childhood treasures, but with hardy cameras. One can walk, bike, boat or take an electric car within the sanctuary.

We saw a plethora of very very pretty birds (some of which can be seen in the photos here - check out captions for description). My personal favourites were the woodpecker (persistent and amazingly strong for its size), the kingfisher (extremely colorful and beautiful), the sarus crane (for its lifelong fidelity to its partner), the snake bird (for being an expert underwater swimmer), and the spotted owl (for being huge - over 4 feet large - and extremely owlish :-)

At the end of the visit, which took all of 2 days from beginning to end, we determined that we should do this much more often!

can you spot the colorful woodpecker?Immensely friendly whistling bird
all the painted storks nest at the top of treesA pair of egretsThe bluejay is supposed to bring one luck - extremely rare bird apparently!
Gayatri on the trail

2 comments:

bluesky said...

pic 3. those look like cranes. but on treetops??

Nothing Spectacular said...

yup - those are painted storks. amazing to see the huge things on tree tops - and that too 6-7 nests (i.e. 25-30 birds if you include the babies) on each tree!!