BBC Knowledge April 2017

(Jeff_L) #1
I was part of a conservation initiative
where familiarisation wildlife camps
were conducted at Eaglenest with
school children. The sheer volume of
biodiversity astounded everyone,
not just the kids. There are at least
450 species of birds (if not more) found
here, including the Beautiful Nuthatch,
a birding favourite, the extremely strange
and entertaining Wallcreeper, and
the rare Bugun Liochicla, first spotted
in 2006 but now almost extinct, with only
20 individuals left in the wild. The drive
through the sanctuary is a bumpy one,
but you won’t notice that, really, not with
the different species of bamboo thickets
that change with elevations, and the
anticipation (and worry) of spotting
a wild tusker, or a Red Panda or a
Clouded Leopard on the route. Nothing
comes easy, though, at Eaglenest; it’s
remote, it has limited accommodation
and the species are tough to spot.
But the views every morning, and the
untamed heart of this forest make it all
worthwhile.

GETTING THERE
BY AIR: Guwahati Airport is 320km away.
BY RAIL: Guwahati is the nearest railhead.
BY ROAD: It’s best to get to Guwahati and
make your way on from there.

STAY
There are just two places to stay, both are
campsites with basic facilities.
LAMA CAMP, run by the Bugun tribe:
call 00-91-94362-51508 or write to
[email protected].
BHOMPU CAMP, run by the Shertukpen
tribe: http://eaglenestbirding.com/bompu-
camp/

BEST TIME TO VISIT: If you’re interested
in reptiles, visit during or the monsoon;
otherwise October is a good time to see
birdlife and still be able to see reptiles.
It gets very cold after that.

Sejal Mehta is a writer, editor and content
consultant. An old travel hack, with a self-
confessed bias towards foress, she is currently
the editor-in-chief at Nature Focus (natureinfocus.
in). She tweets as @snaggletooth_00
and is on Instagram as @snaggletooth00

EAGLENEST WILDLIFE
SANCTUARY/ PAKKE TIGER
RESERVE, ARUNACHAL PRADESH
Excellent for: Birding


I heard them before I saw them – the
sound of large wings beating the air.
As we looked up, two Great Hornbills
flew out from a tree and flew together,
high above our upturned faces. I caught
a glimpse of their majestic casques
(helmets) before they disappeared into
the distance, a mere memory of yellow,
white and black.
For a few seconds, no one spoke,
and then there was jubilation in the
vehicle, complete with a round of silenced
high-fives – this was a forest, after all,
in the middle of Pakke Tiger Reserve.
The Great Hornbill was, for most of us,
a lifer, as they say in birding circles,
a term used when you see a bird for the
first time. I wasn’t much of a birder then



  • or even now – but I was rendered
    speechless at the sighting.
    I will never forget that sound, and how
    gracefully they sliced through the air
    despite their enormous size.
    As I learned more about them, I realised
    they are not endemic to these parts;
    you can spot them just as easily in the
    Western Ghats, it’s the three other species
    of hornbills found here – Rufous-necked,
    Wreathed, and the Oriental-pied – that are
    far more difficult to spot. Pakke is thus
    also the site chosen for the annual Pakke
    Paga Festival (Paga meaning Hornbill)
    that is usually celebrated in January.
    The 860sqkm reserve is an excellent
    birding spot, with many endemic
    species found here.
    The forests of the Northeast are
    different than any other you’ve visited
    in India. It’s in the way the air is pure
    and clear at that height. Or in the way
    trees fill the mountain slopes – as if
    fighting for space – so all you can see as
    you drive up the winding, narrow roads
    are thousands of canopies of varying
    green clustered close together. Or in the
    way that the jungle seems truly wild in
    comparison to the slightly managed
    forests on regular tourism circuits.
    Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary in


Arunachal Pradesh is a revelation. (^) T.KRISHNA PRABAKAR
57 April 2017 April 2017 49

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