Tomorrow the day dawns on a new year: 403 ME. The last day of the year, today is an appropriate time to look back and rid yourself of ghosts. If 401 ME was the year we spent in fear, then this past year, 402 ME, was the year that the world burnt. Uncontrolled forest fires blazed through the hills and forests of Uttarakhand, and a wave of the delta variant of SARS-CoV-2 burnt through India. But the year brought its good times too: meetings with family, friends, a slow return to more regular social interactions.
It was the end of an interlude between two waves of the pandemic. We’d spent the early part of the year travelling. I have great memories of two walks during that time. One was the steep trail in Mahabaleshwar which leads from the plateau down to a lovely view of Arthur’s Seat (I don’t know who this Arthur was). The other was the a few kilometers along a historic trade route which once crossed the Himalayas and connected Bengal to Sichuan province in China, through Bhutan and Tibet. The mule you see above is one of the broken line which once facilitated this trickle of trade.
Our long-planned series of trips through the Himalayas, watching birds and following in the footsteps of the 19th century botanists was brought to an abrupt halt. Soon after we were vaccinated, the great wave of delta started. Travel was restricted again, and the trip we had planned to watch the blooming of rhododendrons in Sikkim, and the subsequent push to cross the 5000 meter mark of altitude had to be cancelled.
The end of spring and the following hottest months of year could have been the most depressing months of our lives. The sudden pruning of our circle of friends and acquaintances was drastic. It seemed like a diminished world when we could finally venture out to the Western Ghats in the monsoon. We had missed the flowers of spring in the Himalayas, but we were in time to see the great blooming of the Ghats.


Then, before you could say Sharad Ritu, it seemed that the monsoon was over and the season of migratory birds was on us. Mumbai is at the very edge of a migratory highway, and every season there is great excitement about vagrants having stopped in the city. This year we joined a group of other birders to travel into the center of the passageway, a few hundred kilometers to our northwest, to watch passage migrants crossing India. It was interesting to see exhausted European roller bird (Coracias garrulus) take a halt in their three day long flight from north west Asia to Africa. The chestnut colour on their backs and the blue in front in a complete reversal of the coat of the Indian roller bird (Coracias benghalensis).








The end of the year was a good season for travel. We were fully vaccinated, the pandemic was at a low ebb, and the weather was good. Perfect for a series of visits to nature parks (a special mention of a fantastic sighting of a clan of dholes, Cuon alpinus, the Indian wild dogs) and historic towns we had always wanted to see but never made time for. Now, as the omicron spreads, we are wondering about the best way to ride out the next year.
I’m sorry for your losses. Hopefully this year you’ll be able to do those postponed trips through the Himalayas (on sunny days with perfect weather) and explore some more places in your country.
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Thank you. A variant which infects so quickly perhaps may also burn out fast. So we hope to take our trips without many months being lost.
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Thank you for sharing the beautiful photos. Hope we all have a good year.
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Thanks. My best wishes to you too
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You were fortunate to be able to do at least a bit of travel I.J., and you surely saw some wondrous sights! Your little rollers reminded me of the lilac-breasted rollers we saw in Africa which are so richly colored. I also remembered your wild dog sighting from a previous post which must have been such a wonderful moment! Wishing you all good things in the New Year, especially including health and the opportunity to once again travel at whim.
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Thank you. I think it’s still a while to go before we can set out to travel without a second thought.
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Some wonderful wildlife photos here! My favourites are Merops Orientalis (a bee eater of some sort I assume?) and the cheetah – beautiful, both of them!
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Thanks. Yes, a green bee eater.
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Loved your photo of the wild dogs! Sorry for the fires there and elsewhere around the world – including here. It’s so sad.
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Thanks. It is indeed
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Wonderful gallery. Take care.
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Thanks
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Happy 403 ME to you! Without you I would not know about this. To new sights and sounds and smells and tastes. Cheers!
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That’s a lovely wish. To new sensations, then!
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A beautiful recapture of the year. Good and bad, happiness and sadness – as always in life. Worse this year for many of us though. I still love your fascinating capture of the Indian wild dogs. Your post on them was a very special one.
Wishing you – and all of us – a better new year.
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Thank you. Already we seem to be at a place where vaccinated people are well off: covid only keeps you home for a few days. I hope we get the rest of the world vaccinated this year. I really want to travel again.
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I must agree. The only way out is to vaccinate the world.
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Inscrutable, as always, I. J., from the opener to Rock9 (Hippopatamus Rock?). Excellent.
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That’s a nice name. Thanks
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That’s a nice summary of the good and the bad of the year gone by. The bad part of it is unusual and take time to accept. It’s a new world now and we’re just adapting to it.
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Sad, but we have no choice but to accept it
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