Anupam Dash Nature and Wildlife Photography

Anupam Dash Nature and Wildlife Photography Here I share my experiences in the cradle of nature through my lens, with all of you... Any questions or doubts? I'll be ever-ready to answer them! Cheers!

The Indian RollerKabini | 2019
21/04/2019

The Indian Roller

Kabini | 2019

Another sibling of the sub adult from my previous post. Kabini | 2019He was spotted by other jeeps, just meters away fro...
21/04/2019

Another sibling of the sub adult from my previous post.

Kabini | 2019

He was spotted by other jeeps, just meters away from the entrance to that zone (zone A) of the park. Our canter had wandered off into the A zone a little before this entrance when our guide was told of this sighting. Thanks to our driver again, we got here ten precious minutes before he walked into the bushes.

What a marvellous creature he is.

Among the cubs of the current queen of the BackwatersKabini | 2019Special thanks to our driver for the intelligent use o...
21/04/2019

Among the cubs of the current queen of the Backwaters

Kabini | 2019

Special thanks to our driver for the intelligent use of routes to get us to this spot.

It was some 6:30 in the PM, minutes before the gates to the safari zone were to be closed, when we made it to this spot only to spend further more time in finding this beast who was enthroned a good 200m away. I risked pushing the camera's sensor to its limits to get this shot of him resting, just in time before he arose and walked away into the growth.

This Red Whiskered Bulbul had its little nest tucked into a part of the thatching above my tent at The Bison. Given the ...
21/04/2019

This Red Whiskered Bulbul had its little nest tucked into a part of the thatching above my tent at The Bison. Given the little patch of trees near the tent, I got some looks at this persevering mom bringing in the delicacies.

Kabini | 2019

The Sentinel,A langur from KabiniKabini | 2019Please stay tuned to the page for more images from my recent visit to Kabi...
21/04/2019

The Sentinel,
A langur from Kabini

Kabini | 2019

Please stay tuned to the page for more images from my recent visit to Kabini. Cheers. 😁😁

Chor Gaad - Jahnavi confluence (Around the Indo-Tibetan border).
14/09/2018

Chor Gaad - Jahnavi confluence (Around the Indo-Tibetan border).

Nelang Valley Pan(please ignore the upper sections which seem off focus... Among my first tries with pans)
14/09/2018

Nelang Valley Pan

(please ignore the upper sections which seem off focus... Among my first tries with pans)

Road to Bagodi, Harsil | May '18
20/05/2018

Road to Bagodi, Harsil | May '18

Deodar Pines, Harsil | May '18  En route to Bagodi/Bagori (the Hindu/Buddhist village as mentioned in my previous post),...
20/05/2018

Deodar Pines, Harsil | May '18

En route to Bagodi/Bagori (the Hindu/Buddhist village as mentioned in my previous post), one can find these monstrous trees with trunks of about 5-6ft in diameter and sap which can alight your camp fires.

As per records, the Raja of Harsil (Fredrick H Wilson) made himself moneyed by selling these trees (and reducing the forests there to barren slopes) for purposes such as making railway sleepers and bridge poles etc...

"According to local lore, Wilson angered the powerful deity, Lord Someshwar, by hunting the wild animals almost to extinction and desecrating the forests. Someshwar was said to have laid a curse upon him, declaring through a medium that Wilson's bloodline would die out after a single generation, that his three sons would squander his fortune and once their bones had turned to dust no one would talk anymore of Pahari Wilson. The curse came true, as within a few decades of his death Pahari Wilson was virtually forgotten, his descendents either dead or untraceable, until Robert Hutchison decided to revive him in his latest book." - https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/15835764-the-raja-of-harsil

Kakora Gaad, Harsil (Uttarakhand) | May '18  This is a naala which is seen on the short hike to a Hindu/Buddhist village...
18/05/2018

Kakora Gaad, Harsil (Uttarakhand) | May '18

This is a naala which is seen on the short hike to a Hindu/Buddhist village (occupied by a few hundred quasi-Hindu families of a really old tribe known as the 'Jadhs').
I imagined beholding this scene before sundown and edited it the best I could to bring about that mood, yet not deprive the image of the real scene.

Pollen of a wildflower | Shot in Feb of 2018
16/04/2018

Pollen of a wildflower | Shot in Feb of 2018

Pillar figurines at the two millennia old Kamakshi Amman Temple...
24/12/2017

Pillar figurines at the two millennia old Kamakshi Amman Temple...

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