Wednesday, September 19, 2012

Simply Singara


The name Singara brings joy to my otherwise gloomy life. Greenish meadows, towering teak plantations,
leopard hunt, leech attacks and tick bites along with census activity do make your trip etched in your
memories forever. A trip to this tiger country does make you get addicted and would prompt you to
back pack and get “relaxed” every now and then.
"Posing" Langur

This place was notorious for poachers and smugglers and now; gradually and effectively the forest
department under the guidance of DFO Ramasubramaniam and his predecessors has restored peace to
this tranquil place. The reserve forest is surrounded by coffee plantations and you might be lucky to see
wild game at the fringes of the reserve bordering the plantations. The herbivores and ungulates tend to
stick around the coffee plantations for a safe resting place during the night which brings the big game
closer to human settlements. “We cant have jackfruit in the shed” warns the anti poaching watcher
Ramachandran and he explains how they survived by smoking the small room when an elephant herd
surrounded the trekking shed to get hold of the Jack fruit inside the shed.

Anti-Poaching Shed

The anti-poaching trekking shed consists of two 10 * 10 rooms with a small outdoor kitchen. Toilets are
a luxury in this remote land. Five days of census duty took me to the remotest parts of the jungle. This
beat has 4 APW’s along with a forest guard and forest watcher. Three years ago a poacher had shot a
sub adult tusker on the forest fringes. The APW recollects on how they had combed the area to capture
the poachers and their loot. During my stay we had reports that Marijuana has been cultivated on the
borders of Singara and Naduvattam which prompted a raid to the remotest part of the beat only to find
that it was a false alarm.

Reptiles of Singara



Five days of all animal census activity took me to places where only handful of humans would have
ventured. The distinct name of places I went made me realise how a place is named. Kanjapally, Mamara
pallam, Badugar Vayal, Noor ekara, Naidu estate, Maanivayal, Periyavayal, Kolathumedu, Kuthirai rodu,
Simkona moolai, Thean Paarai , Naicken Kottai and Hooker moolai to name a few places in this beautiful
reserve.
On top of Hooker Moolai
During Ganja "Raid"


I have hiked a lot inside the forests of Tamilnadu, but nothing could beat the last day hike. Trapped
inside the forest with fading sunlight and surrounded by herds of elephants can only point to one
thing “Disaster”, but with experienced Anti-poaching watchers along my side I had hope of making it
alive. As the elephants surrounded us, we had to take an alternative route which led to another herd
of elephants. With all routes blocked, we took a breather and decided on how to reach the shed. We
crawled under shrubs and bushes without making too much of noise, it was a very close call as we
literally crawled under the elephants noses. Probably we were downwind which turned the situation in
our favor.


Honey inside Honey Comb


We bypassed the elephant herd but were still at the mercy of other inmates of the jungle including
the elephant. As night crept in we thanked the one, who invented flash light. Finally we crossed into
the coffee plantations by crawling under the solar electric fence which separates the reserve from the
surrounding forest. We reached the shed and thanked heaven for bringing us back alive. I would have
never made it back if not for the expertise of the anti poaching watchers.

The dedication and commitment of the meagerly and irregularly paid forest staffs in protecting the
remaining part of the forests is amazing, considering the fact that they have to bear the hardships and
sacrificing their best part of their life to protect the forest from their own kind.