Monday, March 19, 2018

Exciting Leopard Sightings at Kanha

Guests From UK 
Andrew & Rebecca
Courtyard House Kanha

We had missed the tigress having seen the cubs along with the mother we were seeking other wilderness experiences. As it was bound to be the guide was a bit overzealous and took the wrong turn in spite of my instructions. We did not venture into the road of the last day's sightings. But then as always happens a tiger sighting missed is not a good experience.
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But I did not insist instead I decided to venture into a less-traveled path, and rewarded we were. One benefit of a slow drive in the forests is that you come across more, you would otherwise miss if you shoot through. Anyway rules and regulations do not allow speed beyond 20km/hour, and I am a stickler.  

I could make out that the route we had taken was devoid of safari vehicles as most of them had already scoured the area and were on the way for breakfast. Silence, no traffic and slow speed besides alert senses fetch the unthinkable in the Indian forests. 

The leopard was actually turning back for as we realized later, the cub hearing the jeep sound was not willing to cross the road. We were at a distance from the predator as he crossed over and from an angle, we could see her sitting peacefully well lit by strands of morning sun sneaking through the canopy. 

Sometimes it is difficult to decide which animal is striking the tiger or the leopard. Well, that's an individual judgment. I was awe-struck as the light fell on the graceful creature looking inquisitively at us from between the thickets. 

"There is a cub with her!" I whispered upon seeing the young one in the thickets. We stayed put at a distance. The mother came out once again picked up a fallen log and stood looking at us expecting the cub to cross the road and be on the way.  For a long time, the female stood content looking at us surprised but not completely in that serene ambiance. This was a unique sight and we were placed quite close to the leopard cub while the mother was at the other end. They were separated by a twenty feet jungle road.

Tuesday, March 6, 2018

The Vanishing Leopard in India

One Starry Night in The Forest

The female must have been waiting to cross over the road whence my jeep intruded on the serene ambiance of the starry night. Thwarted by the strong headlights the disturbed leopard stood still peering into the ghostly darkness at the bizarre animal in the metal contraption. 

My staff had whispered as we were negotiating the bend on the highway near Jabalpur my hometown. 

"Shining Eyes Sir!"  

It was eleven pm, and I was returning after a busy day purchasing tendu leaf from the Government godown at Kundam about forty km from Jabalpur in the hinterland. There are few places in urban India endowed with forests as good as Jabalpur...albeit losing ground fast due to intruding urbanization.

The reserve forests are losing crown cover here and hold a scarce prey base that supports few remaining leopards desperately surviving. I was also able to come across tigers mating here in the denuded confines of Baghraji Forests perhaps trying to revive their population coming to a definite end in this vanishing wilderness.       

Upon notice by the staff, I brought my jeep to a halt and then reversed. "Point out where exactly you see the eyes reflecting." I switched out the headlights and waited for some time before moving towards the bush where the reflecting eyes were noticed. Pointing my jeep towards the bush I switched on my torch.    

Not one but four pairs of eyes shone as I threw my torch around the bush. It was a female with three cubs about seven feet from us staring at the spectacle of humans in an open jeep. A few decades back this would have been a normal sighting but in these beleaguered times, this was a rare instance. 

"She will get us!"

I was too engrossed in the spectacle to be cautious about the proximity. I could hear her warning coughs as I put the jeep in forward motion. The story had a sad ending, one of the cubs was poisoned a year after and another ended at a police station platform in broad daylight. The fate of the animals was not known thereafter.   

Leopard Cub


Leopard Female


The Status

The status of leopards in India is on a steep decline. The drastic loss of habitat and the ensuing man-animal conflict is resulting in the endangerment of this beleaguered feline species.  As per the recent news, more than a hundred leopards have been found dead in a spate of two months all over India. This is an alarming figure and the rot does not in any manner seems to stem.  

The rapid decline of feline species speaks of our callous attitude towards wildlife and their habitats in general. The situation is further compounded by the colonial legacy which labeled wild animals as vermin especially the predators in India. Unfortunately, wildlife conservation finds only lip service in the country and no major policy decision takes into consideration the preservation of our heritage wilderness wealth. 

The phenomenal diversity is fast disappearing now limited to protected areas and that too the ones receiving dedicated inputs. In vast countries a minuscule portion of land is subject to preservation, the rest is being exploited without any concern.

We live in an era that takes into account the well-being of one species only...that is us. Other life forms are shamefully neglected. Our news and political speak are only concerned with economic growth figures, welfare schemes, and rabid industrialization at cost of crucial natural resources and of course our health. Society has become so human-centered that we consider other life forms as unimportant and often a big nuisance.  

The attitude will certainly result in warming, water scarcity, pollution, lack of productivity that sustains us, and chaos. Name it and you have it. Beware!              
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The image of predators as bloodthirsty rogues is permanently etched in our minds and that shapes our attitude. Albeit hunting is banned by the Wildlife Protection Act 1972, mass-scale lynching by humans on intruding leopards is a frequently occurring event. Poaching by electrification finds no solution and rising prices of wildlife products are an ever-looming threat the country faces.  

The Vedas preached conservation in an ecosystem known as Hinduism in many thoughts originated and survives till today irrespective of extreme divergence. Why are we not following the sound principles preached by our ancestors as regards nature?      

In the bygone era, wild animals including tigers and leopards lived in close proximity to human populations. The conflict was limited to one odd instance of a man killing in urban scapes... not anymore. Man-eating was due to advancing settlements and reducing prey base. All this good was due to ample forests/habitats prevailing before the denudation took place. Our greed for rabid urbanization, uncontrolled agriculture, and illicit wealth generation has taken a heavy toll on natural places all over and the disastrous practices continue. Human beings in any shape, size, and type have repeatedly shown extreme neglect of their surroundings affecting the health of the habitats and ecosystems prevailing they are in. There is hardly any inviolate space left for other life forms in our country.

The decline of wild animal populations started with bounty hunters and elite sport during the Raj, and the large-scale conversion of forests into agriculture fields not forgetting the ever-increasing settlements. Another age-old activity that has had far-reaching consequences was and is commercial forestry and wood logging.     

Poaching has a substantial role in the large number of leopard deaths that take place every year. This sounds like a death knell for the feline species as the population is estimated below ten thousand all over the country. 

Poaching and denudation is the major threat to our wilderness and strong protective mechanism and conservation practices are the need of the hour. The onus is on the Indian administration and politicians who shape our policies. But this does not keep the general population out of the loop. People's participation and awareness will go a long way to preserving or we will certainly lose our heritage.

Images By Suttons UK.        

Thursday, March 1, 2018

Tiger Videos

These are series of mobile video uploads of tigers seen in Kanha National Park in Central India. The videos have been taken during numerous safaris in the park with the guests at Courtyard House Situated in the buffer region of the park. The poor quality is due to mobile limitations and local conditions however I have tried my best to improve. The effort is to display aspects of tiger behaviour and characteristics for amateurs.    

Here is the link!