Friday, December 14, 2012

A sojourn to Koonthankulam




For my occasional sojourns I usually depend upon my two-wheeler but this time I took my car due to the scorching sun and an accident I met last time.

Though I had searched for Konthamkulam in Google I got very little information from the net. I had a vague idea about the route but fortunately was not mistaken anywhere. Koonthamkulam is small village about 18 Kms. east of Nanguneri, a junction in Nagercoil - Tirunelveli. Highway. It is here migratory birds from the other side of the globe like Siberia, Germany, Australia and Ladak come here during the onset of winter, stay for almost six months and return by June-July. I had a least expectation to see any birds since winter is almost over and I considered it as a bonus if at all I see one or two.

After carefully driving through narrow roads with the help of signboards I entered the village. It was a tiny a hamlet and it was around 4.30 p.m when I reached there. I parked my vehicle beneath a big banyan tree and thought of asking somebody about the birds. When I came out of the car the first sight which struck my attention was a large bird, no, a number of large birds on all the branches of the tree. The sight was so wonderful that I stood there with my jaw dropped. I took a few more steps further and there were other trees as well. And to my astonishment all the trees were full of Pelicans! It was indeed a feast to my eyes. The birds which I have seen only in zoos are all in front of me, in very natural surroundings, chirping and tweeting making the entire territory their own.

I decided to ask somebody to get detailed information and stepped into a nearby house and introduced myself. The house owner greeted me well and talked to me in detail about the “foreign delegates” who visit them every year. The villagers are so helpful and supportive to the birds. Once the birds started coming by December, they will stop all manmade noises like crackers, blasting of music etc. and thereby create a cozy environment for the guests’ comfortable stay. Weddings are conducted without any blasting of songs and CD plays, unimaginable for other parts of India. Then he asked his servant, Raja, to accompany me and show all the places where the birds settled down. I walked with him for a while and reached a lagoon. The lagoon had mangroves on its banks and the nearby area was full of small trees, which is a perfect location for the holidaying birds. At a distance I could see so many other varieties of Flamingos, Cranes and Pelicans and many unknown varieties. One or two will take off from the branches amidst a commotion and another will land in between. Some looked like small gliders with large wing spans. Since I was deeply engrossed in the wonderful panorama I failed miserably in taking any photographs.

Raja told me that several years ago a crew from a popular Television channel came here for shooting. The crew took a speed boat and sped all along the lagoon and started scaring the birds away. The villagers furiously protested and the TV crew had to abort their shooting plans and quit immediately. That was the passion and emotion the villagers have about these foreign guests.

I climbed up a nearby watch tower to have a better look of the lagoon. I was in great ecstasy looking at the setting sun, golden lined clouds, green lagoon, small islets and trees on it and mangroves, making the entire place a great page in my travel reminiscence.

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