Atul Jain’s life of birds
A legend in the birding community, he has seen over 1,000 of the 1,300 species in the subcontinent
Atul Jain. Photo courtesy: Atul Jain
It was a cold but
sunny February day in the Great Rann of Kutch, the legendary salt marsh
in Gujarat, when Atul Jain saw his 1,000th bird.
His hands fumbling
with excitement, Jain, a slim, short, athletic (and balding)
46-year-old, tried to focus his binoculars on the pale sand-brown bird
that an untrained eye would have dismissed as a house sparrow.
It wasn’t. The way
it moved was unlike a house sparrow, although some experts believe the
bird belongs to the rock sparrow or Petronia family (others classify it
as a rock finch). The almost unremarkable bird before Jain was the pale
rock sparrow (or pale rock finch), a species usually found only in
Central and West Asia and North Africa. Jain’s sighting was a first for
the species in India.
“This is an
incredible achievement for an amateur birder,” says Bikram Grewal,
publisher, author of numerous bird books, and arguably India’s
best-known birdwatcher.
Jain started birding in 2001.
India doesn’t have
the equivalent of the big year, immortalized in the movie of the same
name starring Owen Wilson, Jack Black and Steve Martin, and based on
journalist Mark Obmascik’s story of the bird-spotting competition in
1998—the winner spotted 745 birds in the course of a year, a record that
is yet to be broken and probably never will be. Yet, Jain’s achievement
and his standing among birders in India reflects the numerical
obsession that drives birdwatchers everywhere.
In the math of ornithologists, a bird in hand is definitely worth less than two in a bush.
Like Jain, many
birdwatchers are “twitchers” (the word derives from the nervous twitches
of well-known British birder Howard Medhurst). These people are willing
to travel long distances to see a new or rare species they have never
seen before (the term for such species is a “lifer”), and add to their
“life list”.
The quest for numbers
There
are around 10,000 bird species on the planet, and many birders have
spent their lives trying to see as many of them as possible. The trend
was started by the late George Stuart Keith, an English ornithologist
who was the founder-president of the American Birding Association (ABA).
Phoebe Snetsinger,
daughter of advertising legend Leo Burnett, spent her inherited fortune
to travel the world and see as many birds as possible, after being
diagnosed with terminal skin cancer in 1981. At the time of her death
(she was killed in a car accident in Madagascar while on a birding trip
in 1999), she had seen 8,398 species, more birds than anyone else at the
time. Snetsinger’s posthumously published memoir, Birding on Borrowed Time, remains an inspiration for birdwatchers and an all-time favourite.
“I had not heard of
Phoebe and Peter in 2005. It was much later that I came to know about
them. I think a few things triggered my quest—to achieve something
different from bird photographers and a craving to discover unknown
places and to be close to nature,” says Jain.
In his own quest
for numbers, Jain has travelled extensively around the country and in
the subcontinent. He spent six days on a sailboat to reach Narcondam, an
island in the Andamans, to spot the elusive Narcondam hornbill. The
bird was in the news recently—the Indian Coast Guard planned to set up a
radar installation on the island, but the Union environment ministry
nixed the plan.
He spent 13 hours
driving on a road that wasn’t from Kohima to the Fakim Wildlife Reserve
in Nagaland, almost on the Myanmar border, to see three species: the
moustached laughingthrush, white-browed laughingthrush and
yellow-throated laughingthrush.
He camped in remote
villages in Mizoram in extreme weather conditions on his way to the
Murlen National Park to spot the reclusive Chin Hills Wren-babbler.
He made the trek
to Arunachal Pradesh’s famed but remote Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary to
see the Bugun Liocichla, Ward’s trogon and green chocha.
He took cruises to
the Maldives and Sri Lanka to spot oceanic or pelagic species, including
the great and lesser frigatebird, white tern and Arabian shearwater.
And he even took an
air taxi to Gan, near Malé, the southernmost island attached to the
Maldives, to see one bird—the magnificent white or fairy tern.
Jain has had to
make repeated trips to the same location to see an elusive species. For
instance, he sighted the spotted creeper, a small bird named for the way
it traverses tree trunks, after six attempts. He saw it at Rajasthan’s
Tal Chappar Wildlife Sanctuary—one of the places where it has been
recorded.
The nest
Jain,
who hails from Gangapur in Rajasthan, is a senior executive with a
multinational company and lives with his family in a modest south Delhi
apartment that stands testimony to his love for birds.
The house is
littered with books, souvenirs, lithographs, stamps, cutlery, pens and
lamps with (you guessed it) bird motifs. Even the upholstery has birds
on it. His prized possession is a set of lithographs by 19th century
English ornithological artist John Gould. Jain also has Pigeongrams from
India Post dating back to the 1940s, with the names of the pigeons—Good
News and Bijli—and the addresses where the messages were delivered.
Jain’s other big
passion is cheap street food, and he almost goes into raptures as he
describes the omelette turned out by a vendor in Delhi’s Farash Khana,
the dosa given as prasad at a temple in Bangalore, and the vada pao
sold outside a girls’ college in Mumbai. “I want to write a book on the
food served by vendors on various railway stations in India,” he says.
Meanwhile, there
are more birds to be seen: the western tragopan (two failed attempts),
tawny owl (one), orange bullfinch, European goldfinch, goliath heron,
pale-capped pigeon, golden-crested mynah, Derbyan parakeet and the
endemics of Nicobar (including the Great Nicobar Crake).
Eventually, he wants to take his number to 1,100.
He is now at 1,036.
• • • • •
Hot spots
Some favourite places to meet birds.
•
Eaglenest Wildlife Sanctuary, Arunachal Pradesh: It is the most
protected forest in the North-East and a great place to see rare birds.
• Great Rann of Kutch, Gujarat: Being on the migratory path of birds, the Kutch gives you ample opportunities.
• Tal Chappar Wildlife Sanctuary, Rajasthan: This small sanctuary has more birds than any other single location in India.
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