Western Ghats is a great stretch of mountains, including valleys, dense forests and
plantations of tea, coffee... according to the circumstance of height, soil and
weather condition. It’s also home to innumerable species of trees, plants and
shrubs and variety of birds and insects and wild animals. For the people of
south and west coast of India, Western Ghats plays an important role as summer
vacation with many parts of mountains or Ghats becomes a hill station where people
visits when the plains turn hotter.
The view from the balcony on the rear side of my uncle's woodhouse |
Kodaikanal is
one of a blissful part of the Western Ghats, comes under the Palani hills range
and it’s the only hill station where I have been to more than 10 times. Since my
uncle built the woodhouse (Smokey Haven) in the lower Palani hills or to say as half Kodai,
staying atop the mountains has become easy and for last couple of years we have
been visiting the mountains twice a year. Nestled amid woods, natural
vegetation and coffee plantation, the place provides lot of opportunity to bird
watch and listening to distinct note of birds. I call it as bird paradise but
birds most of all smaller in size are difficult to find out but I try my best
to capture birds every time I visit there.
Though there
are number of birds in the vicinity of woods, adjoining the woodhouse, some
birds are frequently spotted or to be a residential birds of woods. I have
spotted even migratory birds flying all the way from Himalayas, which are
difficult to believe looking at their tiny size. The bulbuls, magpie robins,
eagles, woodpeckers are commonly found there but for me who sees once or twice
a year turned to be surprise and blissful to watch and shoot. During my visit
in December, it was raining and full of fog and mist but it didn’t stop me
looking for birds and the Red Whiskered Bulbul was the one I able to shoot as
it came perching the wire outside the woodhouse, despite light showering.
Linking this post with SATURDAY CRITTERS