The last time I had visited was with my boys from the
school, back in December 1991, a few months after returning from America. That,
done in youth on a shoestring budget, remains a very rich and happy memory (I
hope reading this post will ring a bell with some of the boys who went with us if
they are reading this – they are almost fifty now!); this, done in much more
luxurious style, will remain another treasured experience lifelong.
My companions this time round were only three (I think
the ’91 team was 42 strong): my very good friend-cum-mentor Saibal, his wonderful
wife Kulbeer, and young Abhishek, who is on the way to becoming my fellow
traveller of choice on future jungle safaris.
The road trip to Kanha Jungle Resort, in Bamhni village,
tehsil Baihar, district Balaghat, a couple of kilometers from the Mukki Gate
which leads into the forest, took four hours and a half, so we arrived a little
before 9. The resort was a delight, very leafy, with plush cottages adorned
with hurricane lanterns hung from hooks out on the porches, and auto-dimming
lights all around the garden. Even a swimming pool, though it was too early in
the year for that. The staff was smart, efficient, and very, very polite. Saibal,
being an old Kanha hand, was on friendly terms with everyone, from the proprietor
to the drivers and guards and waiters, so we had special treatment all through.
A couple of nightcaps before we turned in, knowing that it was going to be a
very long day ahead.
On Thursday we woke up at 4:40 a.m., and were in the
forest department Gypsy by 5:30. The Mukki Gate opens at 6 sharp, and a long
procession of vehicles, each provided with an enthusiastic guide (many of them
young and earnest women), trooped into the forest before diverging along
different trails. We made four trips in all – one on Thursday morning (five
hours and a half), another that afternoon (three hours and a half), and the same
again on Friday. It was gruelling, trundling along on rutted kuchcha roads through clouds of dust,
but the scenery was breathtaking – everything from vast sal groves and limpid lakes, man-high anthills, long stretches of
grassy meadow and trees curling up other trees in out of the world shapes to peacock,
langurs and monkeys, jackal and mongoose and cormorant and lapwing and crested
eagle, Indian bison (gaur), spotted deer,
barking deer, sambar, barasingha, leopard, bear, and, hold your breath: tigers every time we went in, ambling so close
by you could reach out and touch their flanks, utterly indifferent to human
presence, lords of all they survey. Only real wildlife crazies will know how
fortunate that was: we met people, including professional photographers, who
had been on the ‘hunt’ for whole days at a stretch without a single sighting. The
only major species we missed was the wild hunting dog (dhole). Though it was chilly and foggy at daybreak, it quickly grew
hot, the maximum rising to 32 degrees and minimum never going below 12 – most
unfortunate, since traditionally it is supposed to be icy cold at this time of
the year…
I cried off the third trip, firstly because, being the
only senior citizen in the group, I couldn’t miss my beauty sleep four days in
succession, and secondly because I needed some quiet, still time to myself for
all-round enjoyment of everything that was on offer. So I awoke late, had a
very leisurely breakfast, then spent several hours sunbathing outside my cottage,
feet up on the wicker table, listening to birdsong and the wind whispering
among the trees, watching butterflies, sometimes listening to music and
sometimes meditating. It was as close to heaven as one can hope to reach on
earth. I must not forget to mention that, to top off everything, every meal was
absolutely delicious, leaving me struggling not to overeat.
Setting off on the road back at about ten on Saturday
morning, I was back in Durgapur just about twelve hours later, Firoz having
picked me up at Kolkata airport as he had dropped me off before. I slept like a
log.
Kanha well deserves its reputation as one of the best
maintained wildlife reserves in India. There are 100 odd tigers on the prowl
right now. I bought a book, Shaping Kanha, which details all the loving and painstaking effort that has gone
into it over many successive decades – and, strange to say about government
officers (in this case foresters), they sound truly committed and passionate about
their work. I also learnt about various NGOs which are giving yeoman service to
the cause, including the one which had trained one of our guides; find them at
natureguides.in if you have time on your hands and truly want to engage with
something fulfilling, something that can change your life. I wish I were not
too old for that sort of thing.
Bibhuti Bhushan wrote in Aranyak (I am translating as I quote from memory): ‘A day is coming
when this earth will have been laid bare of all flora and fauna. May this
forest survive for the material and spiritual sustenance of the unfortunate
generations who live in such times’. These words kept haunting me as I
travelled, every mile of the way, as well as that ominous prediction by some
old Red Indian chief, ‘only when the last tree has died, the last fish has been
caught, and the last river poisoned will we realize that we cannot eat money’. Thank
God some people have paid heed, and I pray most earnestly that many more of our
young will. In sharp contrast, here is a lament from the book I mentioned
above: ‘In spite of living in the internet age, with so much progress (sic) in
education, specially in urban areas, the state of awareness about nature and
wildlife conservation is abysmally low in the young generation. The importance
and role of wildlife and protected areas are hardly understood, let alone
appreciated’. Will things change for the better before it is too late?
For some more photos, click here. All the best photos were taken by Abhishek.
5 comments:
Dear Suvroda - I am so glad that you got the opportunity to watch the big cat so close.
Regards
Tanmoy
Beautiful!
Delighted to hear from you after ages, Harman. I wish your comments were more than single words, and a little more frequent!
Thank you for keeping us posted about such beautiful places, sir. I have managed to convince my father to take me to Ooty after the ICSE examinations are over. This will definitely be next! After all, it is one of my dreams to be able to see a tiger so close that too not behind a cage.
I really enjoyed your content! If you love exploring wildlife and nature, feel free to check out my profile Indian tiger safari on Facebook. Would love to have you join us on this journey of discovering the wild!
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