NINETY MINUTES IN PARADISE: Dzuleke village, Nagaland.
NINETY MINUTES IN PARADISE:
Dzuleke village, Nagaland.
I was in Nagaland on a birding trip organized by
Nature India with Mandar Khadilkar as our group leader and tour organizer. Our ‘all
male’ group of eight was housed in the village of Khonoma, which has the
apellation of being the first eco friendly, 'Green' village in India following
the adoption of eco-friendly policies by the villagers which includes a total
ban on hunting (which was part of the culture of the Naga people),
and eschewing plastic articles which has paved the way for sustainable
eco-tourism.
Our first day there was a trifle disappointing
because of unseasonal rain during the night and fog throughout the morning that
made birding difficult and photography unfeasible in the poor light. Worse were the numerous leeches that pervaded the undergrowth and were abundant
even on the tarred road!
We were to visit Dzuleke the next day and left
at 5 30 am with a little trepidation as it had rained in the morning prior to
our departure. However, the Gods were kind and we had no fog but bright
sunshine on the way out there.
Birding on the way, we stopped at the Memorial
to the Naga Youth Forum for breakfast and from that vantage point saw the rare
rufous crowned prinia (Prinia khasiana), that is reportedly encountered only in
Nagaland. There was also a majestic flypast by a black eagle and above it
soared a mountain hawk eagle.
Rufous crowned Prinia
By this time the sun was
uncomfortably bright and scorching hot as we motored up to the village of
Dzuleke reaching it at a quarter past ten in the morning. I was tired and hot
and irritable as we had already been out since 5.30 am.
But my mood was to change soon and a serene
calmness settled over me for the next hour and a half.
Dzuleke is a small hamlet of 150 souls twenty
kms from Khonoma at an altitude of 1600 meters. It consists of neat houses
built along the sides of a mountain over looking a picturesque valley through
which flows a river fed by several streams that flow from the surrounding
mountains. The mountains are covered by lush verdure of the primeval forests
that are encountered in most parts of Nagaland.
The river is home to a species of rainbow trout
which is good sport for anglers. There is no internet, no ambient noise and all
that one hears is the gurgling of water as it flows crystal clear over the
small rocks in the river bed.
Dzuleke has several camping and picnic areas
along the river and gets crowded on the weekends with visitors from Kohima and
Dimapur.
Our cars dropped us at one such spot at the far end of the valley and as we got off, the weather changed, clouds filled the sky, blotting out the harsh sun, accompanied by a cool breeze.
There was a sudden change in my mood as the
quiet and peace of the place combined with the mellow weather made me connect
with the environment leaving behind the world that I came from.
We had some bird sightings at the river, namely,
a slaty backed forktail and a white capped water redstart.
I soon fell behind the others as I started appreciating the alpine valley that we were traversing, with its meadows of grass, tracts of ferns, clumps of wild flowers of beguiling hues and a winding path that crisscrossed the valley with rickety wooden bridges on the river. Raising one’s eyes revealed thickly wooded mountains that ringed this valley and kaleidoscopic patterns of cottony clouds through which the blue sky peeped through.
I was alone in what felt like paradise, mind totally synchronized with nature that was revealed at its best.
The others pressed ahead to look for the chestnut bunting, a bird that eluded us, but we had the consolation of encountering its cousin the little bunting.
The skies were devoid of birds but the ground had small beauties like a female crab, a horned beetle and an enormous hairy moth caterpillar as well as a crowd of mud puddling butterflies.
Horned beetle
mud puddling of butterflies
The walk of approximately two kms ends at a sturdy bridge beyond which begin the houses that make up this village and where we were to repair for our lunch.
It had taken me ninety minutes to traverse the valley, my ramble in paradise, my mind at peace.
But paradise was short lived and ephemeral and it all ended as soon as I crossed the bridge, for the clouds retreated and the hot scorching sun beat down on us, tiredness engulfing me as we made our way slowly uphill to the homestay where lunch awaited us.
Maybe it was a dream, a trick of light and mood,
but those ninety minutes are imprinted on my mind as my visit to paradise, a
brief, perfect communion with nature at its best.











Indeed birding is a moment of “Visit to Paradise “ Your apt description of verdant nature& ephemeral climate changing from hot scorching sunshine to cloudy foggy sky is our virtual retreat in nature
ReplyDeleteWas aware of Ashi Prinia but this bird native of Nagaland seems unique. Thanks for this picturesque description taking us -to paradise for a period of reading time at least