Samjhana Moon

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  • I loved this seven bird line up. Found it very amusing to see such patience and focus in these birds"<br />
Stand and Wait is a passive feeding strategy used for making surprise attacks on an aquatic animals. These Egrets bordering a flooded rice field have to work hard as the crop matures.
    Egrets in the lunch line - India 2008
  • I loved this seven bird line up. Found it very amusing to see such patience and focus in these birds"<br />
Stand and Wait is a passive feeding strategy used for making surprise attacks on an aquatic animals. These Egrets bordering a flooded rice field have to work hard as the crop matures.
    Egrets in the lunch line - India 2008
  • Green Parakeet, Chiswick Park, Winter 2009. Green Parakeets are common place in parks and gardens in the leafy London suburbs. Adopted as a preferred habitat by birds that are native to southern Asia. Native to India, Bangladesh, Sri Lanka and Southeast Asia, this Tropical bird seems quite at home in the Evergreens at Chiswick Park in West London. The number of wild parrots living in England is rising at an incredible rate and putting Native species at risk as they compete with native birds for food sources.
    DSC_6383-green_parakeet.jpg
  • Sunrise on the Rapti river, Chitwan, Nepal 2007<br />
o the Gangetic flat lands of the Terai that stretches through out the southern part of Nepal provides a wholly different experience to the commonly adored mountains. Chitwan has over 50 species of mammals, 400 species of birds, and 65 types of butterflies in its hardwood Sal forests, riverine vegetation, and "elephant grass" savannah. The most famous wildlife in Chitwan is perhaps the single-horned Asian rhinoceros and the Bengal tigers whose numbers are sadly in decline due to poaching.
    DSC_2286-boatman.jpg
  • "I awoke early after little sleep with a strong calling to visit the river on this morning in the Terai Jungle. I'm so glad I listened to my inner voice and captured this peaceful shot. I had been offered my Sanskrit name by a good friend the night before on the banks of this river, so it holds a special meaning for me."<br />
The Gangetic flat lands of the Terai that stretches through out the southern part of Nepal provides a wholly different experience to the commonly adored mountains. Chitwan has over 50 species of mammals, 400 species of birds, and 65 types of butterflies in its hardwood Sal forests, riverine vegetation, and "elephant grass" savannah. The most famous wildlife in Chitwan is perhaps the single-horned Asian rhinoceros and the Bengal tigers whose numbers are sadly in decline due to poaching and loss of its habitat.
    The Boatman - Nepal 2007