Chandrimaji! What i saw that day in Chambal is Great Stone Plover. It is
grey in colour. Stone curlew is thick knee and is brown colour. Smaller than
the Stone Plover. Plover is larger, has a much larger beak, has a very
prominent black spot running through the eye, and is GREY in colour as
opposed to brown.
About rajhans, yes I also feel that it is the flamingo. If Krishna lived in
dwarka, Kachchh is very near that, and you can see thousands of flamingos
there. Once I wrote a small article, and I am attching it below. Hope you
find it interesting.
Sorry the tree lovers, I am not keeping to the subject.
akbhatt
~~~~~~~~~~~

*The Birds in Poetry and of Yore*



When you read a poem, hear a song, go through some mythological story

Or the distress call of  some  environmentalist mentioning one bird or the
other, are you able to picture the bird immediately. BNHS or
*Sanctuary*does not give Hindi version everytime they mention a bird,
and sometimes
even though you know the bird, you don't place it properly.  I faced the
same problem till about a decade back. Over some time what I could learn and
guess, I am sharing with you.



'Nirakh sakhi, ye khanjan phir aaye' (lo, my friend, these khanjans have
come again). This is Sumitra during her years of separation from Lakshman
when he accompanied his brother Ram during his exile. Khanjan is wagtail,
mainly yellow wagtail which is a winter visitor found  near water bodies.



Another bird is chatak. 'Chatak khada chonch khole hai/samput khole seep
khadi hai/main apna ghat liye khada hoon/apni apni hame padi hai' (they are
all waiting for the rains-chatak with open beak,  pearl oyster opening the
lips, and the poet with a pitcher). Chatak is pied crested cuckoo which is
the harbinger of rains. It is sighted in northern and central parts of India
just before the monsoons.



Two other birds of the same family are koel, our most famous song bird.  Kokila
used to be one of the more popular east Indian first names. Koel puts her
eggs in in the nest of crows. Wonder what happens to the legendary
cleverness of crow in this matter.  The other is Papiha (brain fever bird).
'Papiha re-e-e? mere piya se kahio jaaye' (O papiha, please convey my
message to my loved one). This bird is vocal during summer. It has a shrill
cry, repeated 5-6 times, rising in crescendo. In English it sounds like
'brain-fever-brain-fever.' In Hindi as if 'Pee-kahan?' (where is my
beloved). And in Marathi 'paos aala' (the rains have come)!



Bird sound resembling Hindi words; another example is Painted Partridge
(kala teetar), a favourite of the shikaris. Its call resembles 'subhan teri
kudrat' or 'Ramchandra-Dash-rath' depending what your affinities are!



Cheel. The floating, gliding pariah kite. There is a proverb by Ghagh:
'dhele upar cheel jo bole/gali gali main pani dole' (if a kite gives a call
perching on an unbroken round of soil, it means heavy rains). The
U.P.Government at one time got research done on such weather
forecasts(=indications) in the sayings of Ghagh. Most of them did not pass
the test.



Associated scavenger bird is vulture (giddh). In Hindi those having keen
sight or insight are called having giddh-drishti. For hunting a vulture has
to have keen eyesight.  Both cheel and giddh you find hovering over a
cadaver.  What was Jatayu, the huge bird that tried to save Sita when she
was being kidnapped by Ravan? It must be one of the larger varieties of our
predators. It could be Imperial Eagle, but my best guess is Tawny Eagle, as
it is more easily found in the southern part of the country.



One need not mention the ubiquitous house crow, another scavenger bird
living near human habitations. I have a sneaking suspicion that Bombay has
the highest crow population in the world (as Delhi of simians, both meant
literally). Had Laxman painted the crow in all its  moods if he was located
elsewhere? Cawing of crow near the verandah is supposed to bring some guest.
'Mori atariya pe kaga bole/mora jiya dole/koi aa raha hai' (Crow is calling
from top of the house, my heart is full of joy, someone is coming).



Vishnu's carrier is Garuda. Location wise, adjutant stork foots the bill. A
huge bird, larger than vulture, strong flier, martial in walk. It could also
be one of the eagles.



During my childhood days the footpath booksellers invariably had a copy of
'Kissa tota-myna'. Well, these two are the most famous mimic birds in the
country. The tota here is Alexandrine parakeet (better known as Heeeraman in
Hindi), and the myna here is not the abundant Indian Myna but Hill Myna
(pahadi myna). Heeraman is easily the most beautiful cage bird, large, with
long tail, having red patch on the shoulder, and ring on the neck. The hill
myna is slightly larger than our common myna, with trade mark orange yellow
wattles on the head. They say Heeraman talks best when kept alone in the
cage. Hill myna is  delicate,  a prized cage bird before the advent of
Manekaji.



Ravi Varma  had made an exact replica of swan in his paintings. The hans in
Hindu mythology and Sanskrit poetry is probably bar-headed goose, a winter
migratory. and not the large swan we see in zoos and abroad.  The neer kshir
vivek rajhans which has the legendary quality of separating water from milk
is according to many our own flamingo which has got colonies in Kutch. Yes,
the legend is partly true. Flamingo's bill is adapted for filter feeding.
Upper bill is thin and flat which acts like a lid to the lower bill which is
like a trough. Both have comb like structure which acts as a strainer. It
feeds in shallow water, scrapes the muddy bottom, churned up mud is
collected in the hollow beak and strained with the help of thick tongue and
the comb-like structure (lamellae). Shoveller, another migratory duck, has
the same quality of separating food from muck.



And lastly, the first Sanskrit poet (adi kavi)  Valmiki uttered his first
shlok when a hunter killed male bird of the pair of Kraunch. 'Ma nishad
pratishthatvam gatah shasti sama yatkraunch mithunadekam vadhi kamamohitam'
(You have killed one of a happy couple, may you not yourself live long).
This was when he was on his way to take bath in river Tamasa. My best guess
is that Kraunch is brahminy duck (surkhab). A large brown migratory duck
always found in pair, and sometimes in a  flock. Seems it had been a
favourite hunting bird for ages. Edible quality of  a meat depends on what
it eats. Ask a lion or tiger. They always go for herbivores, and not touch
other carnivores like jackals. That way, the cannibals had very poor taste!



On Mon, Dec 22, 2008 at 8:39 PM, chandrima roy <[email protected]>wrote:

> liked your pics -- but i wonder if what you call the stone plver is the
> thick knee -- the photo matches with that in the book plate 48 no 8  book
> grimmet inskipp , inskip- and is the flamingo the raj hans in  hindu
> mythology?-- thanks -- Chandrima
>
>
> --- On Sun, 12/21/08, Anand Kumar Bhatt <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > From: Anand Kumar Bhatt <[email protected]>
> > Subject: [indiantreepix:6657] Fwd: Chambal cruise
> > To: "indiantreepix" <[email protected]>
> > Date: Sunday, December 21, 2008, 10:18 AM
>  > I had been to a boat cruise on the Chambal river a few days
> > ago. These
> > months the area gets a  lot of migratory birds. Though the
> > subject is not
> > directly concerned with this forum, you can view them if
> > you feel like. The
> > link is:
> > www.flickr.com/photos/akbhatt/
> > Best wishes,
> > akbhatt
> >
> > ---------- Forwarded message ----------
> > From: Anand Kumar Bhatt <[email protected]>
> > Date: Sat, Dec 20, 2008 at 11:58 PM
> > Subject: Chambal cruise
> > To: [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected],
> > [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected],
> > [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected],
> > [email protected]
> > Cc: [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected],
> > [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected], [email protected],
> > [email protected],
> > [email protected]
> >
> >
> >
> > I have been to my annual pilgrimage on Chambal river on 19
> > Dec. I have
> > attached some photographs to my site:
> > wwww.flickr.com/photos/akbhatt/
> > Enjoy seeing them. comments are welcome. For captions you
> > will have to wait
> > for a few days.
> > Best wishes,
> > akbhatt
> >
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> > Address for correspondence:
> > A.K.Bhatt I.A.S.(Retired),
> > A-59, B.S.F. Colony, Maharajpura,
> > Gwalior. 474 005.
> > Phone 0751-247 2233
> > Mobile 0 94253 09780
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > Anand Kumar Bhatt
> > A-59, B.S.F.Colony, Airport Road
> > Gwalior. 474 005.
> > Tele: 0751-247 2233. Mobile 0 94253 09780.
> >
>  > >
>
>
>


-- 
Anand Kumar Bhatt
A-59, B.S.F.Colony, Airport Road
Gwalior. 474 005.
Tele: 0751-247 2233. Mobile 0 94253 09780.

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