Birdwatchers' Haven
Jessica Luis
Birders engrossed by the flamingoes at Little Rann of Kutch Pic: Jessica Luis |
You don't have to look very far to see birds in Gujarat! This makes it one of the
best places to hold the Global Bird Watchers' Conference, where people from all
over India and the world come to see these winged wonders. We too attended this fourth edition of the Conference and it did prove to be a grand experience!
The
first thing you see (and hear!) when you step out of the Ahmedabad station is
hundreds of noisy Rosy Starlings. These tiny birds that come here for the
winter, fly around in huge flocks that look almost like a small tornado; and we
all stopped to admire this show of aerial acrobatics. It’s amazing how they fly
almost in synchronization, without banging into each other in midair! Even the trees were FULL of Rosy Starlings, and so are the corners of station roofs.
Looks like a cloud of black, but is in fact a flock of birds! The Rosy Starling special airshow when you touch down in Gujarat Pic: Jessica Luis |
Last
year we were lucky enough to see a flock of critically endangered Sociable
Lapwings, Devyani had written about it on the GreenLine blog. This year we were
wondering what surprises awaited us. Or lifers, birds you see for the first
time ever!
This
year, for the first time, there was a bird race at GBWC for all the
participants. The participants had to race against each other, (and time!) as
we tried to spot the maximum number of birds. Everyone was divided into teams
of fours; ours was called the Indian Skimmer (our team member Parveen’s favourite
bird). We also had Pamela Rasmussen bird book as an extra team member to help
us identify birds.
The handy birding guide, Pamela Rasmussen Pic: Jessica Luis |
Team Indian Skimmer! Drawing by: Parveen Shaikh |
The
first day we headed to the Little Rann of Kutch (Rann means desert), and it has
some of the most amazing wildlife that you can find in very few other places. We
were told that Amitabh Bacchan had been here the day before to see the
thousands of flamingos that fly down here. The Little Rann of Kutch (LRK) is
also one of the few places on earth where you find the last surviving
populations of the Asiatic Wild Ass. These, now endangered animals, are found in semi-arid
deserts in places like Mongolia, and we’re lucky enough to have a population of
them in India.
At
LRK you find a herb call Suaeda nudiflora. It’s also food for wild asses, like all desert plants it has
modified leaves so it doesn’t lose water. You can eat the leaves too, they’re
salty and taste a bit like amla!
Suaeda nudiflora: For when Wild Asses get the munchies! Pic: Jessica Luis |
The bus full of birders was chattering with activity… Everyone
kept poking their heads out of the window on the way to LRK. The photographers who came armed with huge lenses kept their cameras
ready. And we yelled 'stop' to the driver if we saw anything extraordinary! Someone spotted a black
and white shape on a rock, which turned out to be none other than the fastest flying
bird in the world, the Peregrine Falcon! It stayed put for a few moments before
flying off.
The Peregrine Falcon flying off in a blur :P Pic: Jessica Luis |
But there were more birds! We stepped out of the bus and saw a SEA of flamingos. It
was enough to make everyone gasp and forget about the bird race. There were Pied Avocets swimming among the flamingos. And
we tried to play "Where’s Waldo?" and spot a Black-headed gull who kept appearing
and disappearing among the crowd of birds.
We had to move on, but luckily we made an unplanned stop at
a lesser known place called Navartala which turned out to be a treasure trove
of birds! There were Pelicans and Greylag geese, and Marsh Harriers probably waiting to pick on distracted ducks.
A gaggle of Greylag Geese...and an Egret Pic: Parveen Shaikh |
Some people went into the thorny bushes to look for birds there (the bird race
was still on!) Legend has it that it’s not the colourful huge birds, like but
little brown birds that win you races. These “little brown puzzles” are hard to
spot and harder to identify.
Little Brown Puzzles :) Pic: Jessica Luis |
One of these are the Warblers, which are all small and brown
and really hard to tell apart. We could hear ‘chuck chuck chuck’ noises from
the bushes but we couldn’t see the warblers. Then one came out and it was still
hard to identify so we took pictures.
One of the puzzles: A Paddyfield Warbler Pic: Jessica Luis |
In Nalsarovar, the “chuck chuck” noises turned out to be Clamorous
Paddy field warblers (after asking a lot of experienced birders and looking into
Rasmussen!
Clamorous Reed Warbler finally comes out in the open at Nalsarovar :) Pic: Jessica Luis |
Sunset at Nalsarovar! Pic: Parveen Shaikh |
There were also Jacanas, swimming, thy looked like ducks from
afar but we could n tee their wide feet, which help them walk across leaves on water
easily.
The next day we headed to Thol Bird Sanctuary for the whole
day! Everyone was running up and down excitedly, either walking
on the forest on one side of the road or looking for ducks on the wetland lakes
on the other side. There were also two Sarus Cranes, the tallest birds in
India. We were spoilt for choice, there for hours alternating between the
two…wetland, forest, wetland forest! We scanned the lake looking for ducks and other
things. There were two Black-tailed godwits fighting near the lake, two Ruddy
Shelducks on the other side. We kept looking at them and almost forgot to click
photographs!
Spotting ducks at Thol lake Pic: Devyani Singh |
A Painted Stork flies by! Pic: Jessica Luis |
Someone saw a sleeping Tickell's Blue Flycatcher in a tree at Thol. It had woken up by the time we got there :) Pic: Jessica Luis |
On the way back someone spotted a
courser running around in a bush. Birds were not the only thing
though. There was a herd of almost thirty wild asses, people ran out of the
bus. They waited for some time before
running off, (a drongo riding piggyback on one of them).
An impressive herd of Wild Ass at the Little Rann of Kutch Pic: Jessica Luis |
Then there was a fascinating
thing we came across, ants with pets! Rahul Khot from the BNHS collection
department who studies insects was with us, he showed us these minuscule strange looking creatures called “cow bugs” on some thorns. These small insects
suck sap from the stems of these plants and give out honeydew. We noticed ants
moving around the stems too. The ants who stay close to these bugs like this honeydew
and keep them as “pets”. Clever, eh?
Ants and "cow bugs" Pic: Jessica Luis |
Then the last day in Velavadar
Blackbuck Sanctuary, we saw blackbucks in acres and acres of grasslands! These
near threatened animals are easily seen here, and they peacefully graze in
hundreds.
Apart from the programme, we also
went to Indroda, it has a dinosaur park which houses fossils found in Gujarat!
This was highly exciting for the dinosaur nuts among us, there were statues of
Triceratops and Tyrannosaurus Rexes and we had flashbacks of our childhood days
when we watched Jurassic Park! We also saw a descendant of one of them, a Calotes
sunning itself on a leaf. There were fossils of dinosaur teeth and dinosaur
eggs. Our team, the Indian Skimmers also won in the bird race with a bird list
of 166 species! The icing on the cake was seeing an Eurasian Griffon flying
high in the sky at the last minute, which Devyani pointed out and which went
on our list- it was a lifer for all of us!
Flashback mode! Fossils at the dinosaur park in Indroda Pic: Jessica Luis |
A green Bee-eater posing for the camera! Pic: Jessica Luis |
A Grey-headed Canary Flycatcher in the hotel where we were staying Pic: Jessica Luis |
These are some of the things we
came across on our latest trip to Gujarat for the Global Birdwatchers
conference. If you too have traveled someplace lately, let us know about the
interesting things you've seen!
Comments
and loved the photos !! Gr8 work!
nirmala
-Sonali