A
decade ago, an article by noted birders Bikram Grewal and Sumit Sen about Lava,
“India's hottest birding mile", had imprinted itself indelibly in my
memory. So when a chance came up to join a birding group there, I wasted no
time in signing up and drooled over the prospect of encountering richly
coloured rarities that you could literally stumble over in a short span of
time.
We
landed in Bagdogra and drove to Sevoke station where the Teesta leaves the
hills, the chaotic traffic and toxic air of Siliguri giving way to verdant forests
of the Mahananda Wildlife Sanctuary. An unplanned “lunch break”in the forest adjoining
Sevoke railway station had an enthralling “special" item on the birding menu:
the tiny collared falconet, whose own staple diet is butterflies and other
insects. India’s tiniest raptor lorded over the tiny station atop a pole, much
like a pompous station master would. Though the 3 pm hour was not the best for
birding, four species of barbets and an Oriental pied hornbill were among the 20
odd species that kept us satiated till tea time.
Lava
at 2040 m, on the outskirts of Neora Valley National Park, was our overnight
halt: next morning we breakfasted at Chaudaferi camp where we photographed
black-faced and chestnut-crowned laughingthrushes gobbling up bread crumbs in bright
sunlight. On the way, a hoary-throated barwing and a dark-breasted rosefinch
were both lifers for me. After a sighting of the wonderfully aptly named golden
bush robin, we turned east towards Kolakham. The rufous-naped yuhinas had taken
over the forest, much like pigeons take over our cities. Red-headed bullfinches
are poorly named: it’s the black and white on their bodies that makes a true
fashion statement. A group of bar-throated sivas (formerly chestnut-tailed
minlas) posed for long on the road, of all places, busily foraging in the sand.
Ever tried differentiating the rare rufous-breasted bush robin from the
commoner blue-fronted redstart? Extension of the belly orange all the way up to
the chin is seen in the former: but chaos reigns when the two are seen one
after the other!
The
road to Algarah from Lava, India's hottest birding mile, was sadly being
widened into a two lane highway, given the ongoing security situation and its
proximity to the Chinese border: sadly the wonderfully described birding spots on it were the collateral damage. The Lava-Rishob road finally
provided the perfect habitat for Himalayan birding: narrow, undisturbed and
potholed with dense forest canopy on both sides. And sure enough the lifers
flowed. A rufous-throated wren-babbler was heard and then photographed from
close range, while the pygmy wren-babbler waited at roadside and then hurriedly
dashed across the road. Five Himalayan cutias on a single mossy tree followed! Nothing can beat seeing these “cute", incredibly
charismatic moss lovers. The nominations for best tiny bird of the day went to the
wren-babbler, the luridly “golden” golden babbler, the unmistakable black-faced
warbler and the impossibly cute black-throated
parrotbill. And the Oscar went to.......
Sunrise
on Mount Khanchendzonga promised a packed birding day ahead as we set off from
Kolakham along Raset trail. When that same morning sunlight fell on a pair of
male scarlet finches, ah! Next to keep up its appointment at the sunlight photo
studio was the fire-tailed sunbird. The booming decrescendo call of a pair of huge
bay woodpeckers kept us engrossed with craning necks as they moved from tree to
tree. Sightings of scimitar-babblers make birders faintly delirious: the
slender-billed with its near semi-circular bill was followed by the even rarer coral-billed
scimitar babbler with its glowing reddish-orange bill. When the sun went behind
a cloud, the white-gorgeted flycatcher’s gorget shone like a beacon in the
undergrowth. A mixed hunting party of red-tailed minlas, yellow-cheeked tits,
bar-throated sivas and a speckled piculet left us with eye strain trying to focus
on one, then the other. Three red-faced liocichla showed themselves for just a
second, just enough time for a couple of our photographers to squeeze off a
frame.
Birding
groups generally consist of two species: the photographers (with their big SLR
lenses) and birders (like me, pretending that photography dilutes the joy of
birding but constantly envying the superb images on others’ camera screens over
their shoulder). So it was a bit of a David vs Goliath situation when my bridge
camera managed, most fortuitously, to take images of two rare undergrowth skulkers,
the rufous-throated wren-babbler and the grey-throated babbler!
You
must have heard of boom towns triggered by gold mining, but a hornbill boom
town? That’s what Latpanchar, our next destination at an altitude of 1400 m,
had become. From a sleepy unheard of hamlet, reports of easy to sight rufous-necked
hornbills had resulted in a mushrooming of homestays, each with a big hornbill
photo as its signboard. Morning birding duly resulted in sightings of a
hornbill pair within ten minutes. Apparently hordes of photographers wait
opposite nests for the dream photo during nesting season in April: a definite
economic incentive to preserve the hornbills and the large trees on which they
depend to nest. I wondered about the collateral damage of hornbill tourism on
the forest and how many years the hornbills would continue to nest here
undisturbed.
Subsequent
desert after the main meal consisted of a plethora of lower altitude
specialists, chief of which were the lovely green magpie, the rare sapphire
flycatcher and the long-tailed broadbill. A rusty-cheeked scimitar babbler kept
up its two toned call for a while. A
pair of slaty-backed forktails scrambled on our approaching their stream. So
near was the call of the tiny slaty-bellied tesia, yet so far was it from being
seen. An Asian barred owlet turned its head a full 180 degrees to glower at us
before flying off. Will Latpanchar become an international hornbill birding destination
or will the hornbills lose their home? The next generation will tell us.
North
Bengal’s treasures are in peril though. Lava town is expanding in all
directions and the dense forest we birded in, outside the small Neora Valley National
Park, is up for grabs by settlers and developers. Mahananda is a wildlife
sanctuary only in name with no entrance check post, no forest department
patrolling and big settlements such as Latpanchar within. Between road widening
in the name of security and clearing of forest land in the name of development,
these forests may not remain for another generation.
The
last day was spent at Sukna and Rongtong in the Mahananda wildlife sanctuary, a
short drive north from the noise and pollution of Siliguri. The road was parallel
to the iconic Darjeeling mountain railroad, and we wondered whether we should
have taken the train. Obviously the train would not have stopped repeatedly for
our pre-breakfast birding, lower altitude species tumbling out of the forest
barely before the earlier one was identified. Two crested goshawks banked above
in unison, while a Himalayan buzzard perched for long in bright sunlight.
Memories to last a lifetime!
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| Asian barred owlet |
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| Bar-throated siva |
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| Bay woodpecker |
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| Black-faced laughingthrush |
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| Chestnut-crowned laughingthrush |
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| Collared falconet- India's smallest raptor |
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| Coral-billed scimitar babbler |
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| Lava forest |
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| Ideal birding road Lava-Rishob |
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| View of Lava from Kolakham |
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| Fire-tailed sunbird |
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| Golden-throated barbet |
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| Green-tailed sunbird |
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| Grey-cheeked warbler |
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| Grey-throated babbler |
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| Himalayan buzzard |
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| Himalayan cutia |
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| View of Lava from Rishob |
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| Long-tailed shrike |
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| Rufous sibia |
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| Rufous-necked hornbill female |
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| Rufous-necked hornbill male |
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| Rufous-throated wren babbler |
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| Rufous-vented yuhina |
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| Rusty-cheeked scimitar babbler |
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| Scarlet finch male and female |
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| Shikra with a kill |
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| Sikkim (brown-throated treecreeper) |
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| Slaty-backed forktail |
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| Striated bulbul |
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| White-rumped shama |
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| White-tailed nuthatch |
Absolutely fabulous! Each bird is amazing, as is your description.
ReplyDeleteDr. Ram, Reading your Birding Travelogues is one important event when you post it. The sequence, the rarity and pictures would entice any birder to mark these on the to do wishlist. Wonderful lifers on your sightings. The pictues and scenery is great. Happy to read this one.
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