The warm sun was beating down hesitantly upon the huge glass windows in office when, Shashi, my Law school classmate called me and invited me to a trip to the Nagarahole National Park.
The 6 of us (Shashi, Singh, Murthy, Basha, Gawa and I), were supposed to leave on Saturday morning and spend that night and the next day in Kalhalla camp cottage. I felt that we would be missing out on any Saturday morning sightings, if we stick to the original plan. I managed to convince everybody to leave on Friday night itself and reach Nagarahole before the gates open.
We had an uneventful trip (
Morning magic - Nagarahole
We passed Murkal and reached the Kalhalla camp and decided to drive around some more before checking in. We got to a deviation further on, one of which goes onto a small
We reached the Kalhalla camp, only to find out that the rooms promised to us were already booked by somebody else. After hectic conversations with the resident ACF (The person who had promised us the rooms in the first place), it was decided that the other person will get the room after all but, we would be accommodated in an anti-poaching camp. This was heaven sent for us as people rarely get permission to visit such camps. So, this new twist was just terrific and I'm eternally grateful for this kind act of the officer and may his tribe increase.
The ACF decided to send us to the Paaradakada Anti-poaching camp and sent along Kalim Khan, a funny old man with a lot of forest stories in his kitty. We reached the camp after driving through the thick jungle for around 8KMS. The camp was managed by a cheerful lot which included one forest guard, Udesh and three forest watchers, Vinu, Prakash and Gajendra.
Paaradakada Anti-poaching camp
The Lakshmana Tirtha river flows right next to the camp and is a hot spot for the wildlife around there. The camp has a two room building which serves as the main house and a smaller thatched hut, which serves as a kitchen. The forest guard and watchers took us on a small walk, to a water hole. The walk was sheer pleasure and the anticipation of sighting an elephant in those surroundings filled me with sheer terror and also the desperation to see one at the same time. However, we didn't sight anything and came back to the camp and sat around the campfire listening to the watchers. The watchers are tribals, born and bought up in the forest and are a treasure trove of information and stories. Listening to stories about wild animal behavior from these true children of the forest, made the night a memorable one.
Vinu - Child of the Forest
Water hole near the camp
We got up early next morning and went on a walk to the river bank. While on the way, we passed acres and acres of Bamboo forest destroyed by Elephant herds. Seeing the destruction there, made us realize the sheer strength of these magnificent animals. At the same time, the surroundings scared the s*** out of me. The antique double barrel gun with the guard was not exactly heartening. Anyways, the walk passed uneventfully with only a Monitor Lizard spotted by Gawa.
We got back to the camp, had breakfast and started back towards the Murkal camp. The Sumo was fuller now with the guard and the watchers jumping in. We were rolling along like an asthmatic cow, when all of a sudden; a Tusker loomed right in front. He was a massive giant and was in full musth unknowingly, we had strayed too near this giant and he started moving his bulk towards us... I realized how puny the Tata Sumo was when faced with this behemoth. The driver backed the vehicle slowly and the largest Mammal on earth abruptly turned away. He went back inside the thicket and we moved and passed him and stopped at a safe distance. He came out of the thicket and crossed the road, giving me enough time for these shots.
The Paaradakada Tusker
The Paaradakada Tusker
We drove along after this and went to the Murkal camp for our lunch. We finished it in due course and started home. Before that, we had to feed Jaggery to the
We gave him some Jaggery and moved on to feed Somashekara, one more camp elephant. Somashekara is a 39 year old stunner with a pair of very formidable tusks. After he greedily ate enough Jaggery to feed a school, he belched on our faces to convey this thanks and with a faint smell of Jaggery lingering, we left Nagarahole, promising to come back as soon as possible.
1 comment:
That was a wonderful post. thoroughly enjoyed it. He must be the "largest mammal on earth" but look how gentle his face looks. Super! :)
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