Rare tarsier rediscovered in Indonesia

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QhqK8JrGWRk] After Borneo, it’s now Indonesia’s turn to throw surprises at us. Scientific American reports the rediscovery of a rare primate, the Pygmy Tarsier (Tarsius pumilus). The nocturnal cousin of lorises and bushbabies, the pygmy tarsier is mostly insectivorous and can rotate its head like an owl. More here The…

When a tiger couldn’t bear it

The tiger and the sloth bear are two major predators of the Indian jungles. Between them, it’s clear who’s boss. Some people know that tigers hunt and eat bears. Others don’t. And then, there are people who can’t bear to think about either possibility. The acclaimed wildlife filmmaker Shekar Dattatri…

Away with the cranes

The Green Ogre is going away.  Tonight, I take a train to Delhi. Then, it’s off to the breeding grounds of the Sarus Grane (Grus antigone) in the wetlands of Uttar Pradesh.  I’ll be back in the first week of December. Watch this space. Read the back pages. Keep yourself…

Down in Serendip, Amila Salgado clicks away

I stumbled upon (not via Stumbleupon but via BlogCatalog) a very attractive blog on birding and wildlife from Sri Lanka. Gallicissa, Amila Salgado’s blog, provides informed photographic insight into the wildlife, birds and insect life of his fascinating island nation. I’m making a travel plan for a birding trip. And…

How green is tea?

Tea has been on my mind. Mostly because I have spent the last few weeks drinking it guiltily. Coffee, I am told, is better for our forests than tea. Two NCF researchers I met in Valparai confirm this. Tea cultivation essentially involves the clearing of large tracts of forest, leaving…

Flowering trees of Bangalore – now in PDF

S Karthikeyan is well known among Bangaloreans who are even remotely interested in nature. A widely regarded wildlife researcher, birder and butterfly expert, he has also photographed and documented a user-friendly guide to the flowering trees of Bangalore. For a long time, it remained a post on his website, linked…

Encounter – Changeable Hawk Eagle

What’s so changeable about this forest eagle, you may ask. The answer has more than one context.   I cannot talk about the Changeable Hawk Eagle with laypersons without encountering that most pedestrian and wearying of questions: “What hawk eagle?” For your benefit, I say again: Changeable. One that is…

For a plastic-free hair rinse, go Indian

Over at Life Less Plastic, I was pleasantly surprised to see that the best non-plastic hair rinse options are some Indian recipes that have been used for centuries.  The common ingredients: shikakai (the fruit of Acacia concinna), amla (the fruit of Emblica officinalis, the Indian gooseberry), henna (made from the leaves of Lawsonia…

Light up the darkness, smoke out the evil?

Over the three or so decades of my life, I have seen many Deepavalis come and go (true to my chauvinism, I prefer the South Indian ‘Deepavali’ to the globalised ‘Diwali’)*. The essence of our festival of lights, I have been variously informed, is to symbolise the victory of light…

When Wildlife Week became a fortnight

The Green Ogre has been away being more green and less ogre, and thus his stomping grounds have been quiet. I have enjoyed the most immersive wildlife and nature experiences over the last few weeks at some exquisite biodiversity sites in southern India. October 9 through 12, my friends Sahastra,…

Bird list – BR Hills, Oct 9-12, 2008

BR Hills Oct 9 – 12, 2008 Birders: Dr Prashanth, Sahastrarashmi, Sandeep, Bijoy Oct 9 – Nagavalli Tank, Chamarajnagar en route to BR Hills via K Gudi 1. Spotbill Duck 2. Gadwall 3. Black Ibis 4. Eurasian Spoonbill 5. Lesser Whistling Duck 6. Barn Swallow 7. Green Sandpiper 8. Red-wattled…