Thursday, 23 September 2021

Living in a Jungle Part 2, bird sightings

 Today I woke up to the sound of water being poured from a large jug into a smaller tumbler . The sound repeated itself , at intervals . 

The sound emanated from a branch of the jamun tree outside . Upon investigation , it turned out to be a treepie . a rufous treepie. A bird from the crow family , endowed with the whites , browns and whites , in a fetching and complicated combination . stripes of white ending in black , on the tail , a single slash of white on black wings . Brown body with a burnt sienna head and tail . The moment I had located the noise maker , it was joined by its compatriot , producing another sound which can be best described as the rubbing of an inflated balloon .

Then three of them flew away , cackling in their usual, hoarse  cries . Presumably telling each other that " what a performance that was , wasn't it ? "

I , in my short stay here, have seen two unusual varieties of flame backed woodpecker, one black shouldered and the other lesser golden backed woodpecker . They hit a termite infested dead branch of eucalyptus infront of the house with tremendous force and their bills appear to continue to ricochet , for several minutes . It sounds like a marble thrown on a steel plate . Ricocheting endlessly . It is amazing to see a woodpecker do that . Nature's very own power packed drilling machine.

Another day a couple of bright yellow and black golden orioles flew past . Peelolo. One cried . The mate Peeloloed right back . Very cute little birds . The type that would make people want to cage them , and make them sing for their supper . Beauty , even in birds , is a dangerous thing . It can cost you your freedom .

I remember seeing a caged bulbul in Kolkata once . The poor thing was set out on the hot tin roof , in a cage , made of wire . I , most likely heard it , before I saw it . It was probably asking for help , or hurling abuses at its captors , in its own dulcet tones . What humans heard as a pretty song , was probably a desperate plea for help, a plaintive yelling . What made the sight more tragic , was it continually moving around in its small cage , round and round . 

Then the crows . In the plains , you see the common house crow , which  has ashy grey neck. Here we see the Jungle crow , a glossy , jet black cousin of its house variety . They have harsher cries , and are equally noisy when roosting , equally intrepid , intelligent and vastly outnumber any other bird .

Pigeons , those common rock varieties , who so plague our lives in the cities are conspicuous by their absence . 

Amongst all the common dove varieties , I have seen only a few small brown doves here. 

The mynahs are also fewer in number , Though , the same common mynah we saw in the plains . 

Then there are hornbills and peacocks. The unmistakable stars of the show . There are hornbills with a massive black casque over their yellow , enormous beaks . They have black tails , tipped white . Black enormous wings , white tipped . They sway branches with their sudden weight . They fly low , and slow , like miniature aircrafts . 

The peacocks rarely come out of their wooded areas . But occasionally , they fly clumsily , their wings beating the air into a hugely audible whoosh. Then they honk,  which is heard far and wide .  

In our previous station , I saw the brown headed barbet , whereas here , I have seen the striated barbet. a close relative . The calls and habits identical . They too , come attracted to the termite infested dead bough . 

Then there are sparrow hawks , white throated kingfisher and the black shouldered, bright red beady eyed  kite.  They keep , nonchalantly , sitting on fences , or power lines . But they are known to feast on toads , grasshoppers , even raid the smaller birds' nests.

Another star attraction here is the glossy ibis . Of the black curved talon like beak , and  a large clumsy body which flies agilely and lightly perches on the topmost branches of the eucalyptus. 




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