Thursday, 24 March 2022

Gurugram and its Wildlife

A flock of Bar-headed Geese spotted at the Najafgarh Lake


Gurugram, or Gurgaon as it used to be called, is a conundrum! It is also known as a fast-developing city on the very doorstep of New Delhi. It used to be a very quiet and rather sleepy town with lush-green pockets of forests, wetlands and even streams before development started. Now it is home to tall skyscrapers, flyovers and expressways with vehicles hurtling on them. However, in spite of all the development taking place, Gurgaon is a place waiting to be discovered! Very few of the people settled in the city are aware of the rich abundance of wildlife that is waiting to be discovered. A short drive to the Sultanpur National Park on the Gurgaon-Jajjhar highway will present the visitor with a pleasing variety of birds and animals one wouldn't even have dreamt was present in the vicinity.

A flock of Bar-headed Geese spotted at the Basai Wetland

The Basai Wetland, also close to the Gurgaon-Jajjhar highway, although being steadily exploited for its land to build buildings on, is home to a large number of migratory birds such as Bar-headed Geese, Greylag Geese, Northern Shovellers and pintails. Just adjacent to the Sultanpur National park is an even more massive wetland formed out of the flooding of the Najafgarh drain into the surrounding area. I was able to spot the largest flock of Bar-headed Geese right there. When an acquaintance of mine exhorted me to visit the Bharatpur National Park, I replied, telling her that I did not see any reason why I should travel all that distance when I could spot and photograph a large number of wild animals and birds too.

A solitary Greylag Goose spotted at the Basai Wetland


It is simply amazing how much wildlife one can spot in and around Gurugram in spite of all that development taking place in the city. One can spot Jackals, Asian Antelopes and even a variety of wildcats in the outskirts of the city! How remarkable, it is indeed that wildlife continues to survive even when they are deprived of their rightful place in the city. The Sultanpur National Park is one spot where I have spotted all the three wild animals, though I was not able to photograph the wildcats because they had cut across me too quickly!

An Asian Antelope feeds its calves even as the father stands guard





An Asian Golden Jackal stares at me even as its pack member confronts me




A dead Monitor Lizard Spotted at the Basai Wetland














Tuesday, 22 March 2022

Smart Weapons and Smart Tactics determine the outcome of conflicts today !

Does the size of the weapon and the use of Brute Force Really make any difference?

We have come a long way from the times when sheer might and brute strength determined the outcome of a battle during the second world war. The Japanese Battleship, Yamoto was one of the largest Battleships of the second world war, followed, probably by the Bismark and the Tirpitz. All three of the battleships would have struck a psychological fear into the minds of the allies, without even having fired a single round! My father's uncle spoke about how his ship had been struck by one of the shells shot by the Bismark and had been sunk. He, along with others drifted in the ocean onboard lifeboats. He spoke about how the Bismark had become a byword of terror, a veritable Chimera that everyone wanted to get rid of and yet feared to get within the range of its massive guns.

Size is a disadvantage!

Today, countries are working on developing ships that employ stealth technology. Naval Engineers and designers are working on developing hulls that are harder to detect visually, acoustically and through radar. The idea is for the ship to merge or blend into the surroundings rather like the chameleon. One of the biggest flaws of the Yamoto or the Bismark was their sheer size! They were easily spotted from the air by reconnaissance aircraft and then what remained was for allied vessels to lay a trap for them, ambush and attack them from all sides.

Ultimately, all three of these brute battleships were destroyed through the smart tactics of the allied fleet when they came under concerted fire from various ships. But then it was not just Battleships that were built huge during the second world war - tanks too were built huge with the belief that the massive size of the tanks would make them impervious to enemy strikes, also bringing out a psychological advantage thanks to their perceived infallibility. The German Panzer Tanks were some of the most formidable machines of war and they were used in concentrated and massed formations, often achieving success through brute force! The Panther Tank weighing 43 tons and the Tiger II tank weighing at 68 tons were some of the largest tanks of those times.

The long lines of advancing vehicles, often stalled on the Ukrainian roads, often miles long have made them vulnerable to attacks from drones. The same can have been said of long lines of German vehicles stalled on roads leading to the Russian capital during the Second World War.

Mind the mud! The terrain and the climate matter.

However, brute size and brute force have not always led to success, even during the second world war. The huge size of the Battleships of the Axis countries during the second world made them unwieldy and difficult to manoeuvre, no wonder, they required a flotilla of cruisers to escort them. The Tiger Tanks too proved unwieldy and too heavy to drive through the Russian mud during the German invasion of  Russia during the Second World War, something that is being echoed in the Russia-Ukraine conflict these days. The Tiger Tanks that had become bogged down in the Russian mud became sitting ducks for the enemy to attack. We all know that the unforgiving Russian winter stalled the advance of Hitler's armies towards Moscow during the Second World War. What we need today are Light tanks that are more manoeuvrable, faster and easier to maintain than the main battle tanks like the T-72 or even the Abrams Main Battle Tank. Tanks like the K-2 Black Panther Tank, Challenger 2, Armata, Merkava MK 4, and the Nr.7 Type 90 though smaller and lighter have, however smart protection and are manoeuvrable in nature. The demands of warfare today have become very different from the past when you probably could take things a bit slow. The Russian invasion of Ukraine has taken rather too long, a testimony, in effect that Brute Warfare Tactics don't promise success in today's times. It is not the size of the Tank or the size of the APC that determines their success in the mission, rather what matters is how fast they can move, and in doing so how well they can evade being hit by drones! Russian Tanks stuck in the mud, or even stuck in the middle of a stalled column of vehicles have been struck at will by the ubiquitous Bayraktar TB2 drones.

Oftentimes, it is the terrain that is a determining factor in today's warfare and not the size of the weapons that you have. The Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict in the late 1980s and the early 1990s proved how ineffective the government's T-55 tanks were in the mountainous regions of the north. When the Eritrean fighters arrived in the capital of Ethiopia, Addis Ababa, some of them came riding in the very T-55 tanks that had once belonged to one of the largest armies of Africa. Smart Guerilla tactics employed by the Eritrean Liberation front had led to the defeat of the Ethiopian Army, one of the most well-equipped armies of the continent. The success of the EPLF (Eritrean People's Liberation Front) was also because the mountainous terrain in the north favoured guerrilla warfare. History repeats itself and many leaders forget that they should take into consideration factors like the weather, rains and terrain into consideration. The weather conditions prevented the German Army from taking Moscow because their tanks and infantry vehicles got stuck in the muddy terrain. The extreme cold weather conditions followed by the thawing of the ice, turning fields into muddy slush grounds ground the advance of the Panzer divisions. Napoleon failed to conquer Russia because among other things he failed to take the weather into consideration. The same has happened with the Russia-Ukraine war. We have come across numerous videos on social media purportedly showing Russian Tanks and Armoured Personnel Carriers, (APCs) bogged down in deep mud, easy killing for anti-tank missiles!

Stealth is the Key Word, Can you hide from the Drones and UAVs doing rounds in the skies?

Stealth is a key-word in today's warfare as is clear from what is happening in the Russia-Ukraine conflict. Tanks that are immobile are sitting ducks mainly because they are clearly visible to the drones belonging to the Ukrainian forces. Drones are easily able to find these sitting-duck vehicles and they can take their time in targeting them. As such the weapons of choice in modern warfare are UAVs, or Drones that are remotely controlled. Large and powerful tanks have become easy meat for these aerial borne smart weapons, weapons that can move swiftly, undetected, armed with infra-red eyes, and laser-guided missiles. The Bayraktar TB2 drones are relatively smaller drones that have a smaller radar footprint. In many cases, drones are used for surveillance purposes to keep track of enemy positions. These are weapons of choice today, especially if you no longer have a viable airforce with interceptors, fighters, bombers and ground-attack aircraft. The use of drones by the Ukrainian forces has proved to be very effective in the existing conflict.

You are good as long as you have not been found by a missile; size or bulk won't save you!

One very important gamechanger is the use of the NLAW or the Next Generation Anti Tank Weapon, also known as the Main Battle Tank and Light Anti Tank Weapon. The NLAW or MBTNLAW is a light and versatile shoulder-launched fire and forget anti-tank weapon that has spelt the death knell of the Main Battle Tanks of today. There has not been a successful defence from these deadly missiles apart from the rather dubious welding up of canopies with steel slats meant to deflect the primary blast of the missile prior to penetrating the hull of the tank. The NLAWs have a shorter range than the Javelin anti-tank missiles, but then the former missiles are lighter and easier to operate from shorter distances from ambush points.

Portable Smart Weapons are the key to success

There are lessons to be learnt from the Ukraine war and the most important one is that this is the end of the Main Battle Tank. Bulk and size cannot guarantee its safety when attacked by anti-tank missiles. What we need today are lighter and more agile tanks and perhaps what we need more than tanks and piloted aircraft are UAVs, Drones, and man-portable smart fire and forget missiles. We need to work on developing smaller, smarter and less visible midget drones. Midget drones would be a gamechanger especially as they would be cheap, disposable and would not have a significant radar signature! Single-use drones, suicide drones or Kamikaze drones can wreak havoc on advancing forces. Tomorrow's wars will be fought remotely and air superiority will be possible only when you have enough drones to gain control of the skies. 

Isolate, Strike and Retreat!

The Wolf-Pack tactic is a well-known strategy employed by most resistance groups throughout history. Guerilla tactics have been employed all over the world throughout history. The use of smart weapons like portable missiles have seen action in Ukraine. We have seen numerous videos purportedly of Ukrainian soldiers attacking isolated tanks and APC with portable anti-tank missiles from specially scouted ambush points, bottlenecks and strategic points. One would have heard of similar tactics being employed by EPLF fighters targeting tanks belonging to the Ethiopian armed forces during the Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict during the eighties. The use of portable, easy to use and yet deadly missiles has helped resistance fighters move quickly from one ambush point to another. The same tactic was used by Afghan fighters during the occupation of the country by the armed forces of the erstwhile USSR. Flexibility, compactness and smart planning are important factors that will decide the effectiveness of the defending forces in Ukraine.

Merge with your terrain.

Knowledge of the terrain has a very important role to play whether it is with reference to urban warfare, street to street fighting or even fighting on mountain ranges, open fields, or even forests. It is often reiterated that home defenders have a better idea of ambush points, nooks and crannies, street corners, swamps and wetlands. An advancing army will always be at a disadvantage regarding the unknown terrain of the country that it is invading whereas a defending army is always at an advantage in its home. The EPLF forces knew their terrain very well while fighting the Ethiopian army, they knew each mountain, valley, culvert and overlooking high ground from which to attack advancing platoons.

Friday, 25 February 2022

Bird Spotting at the Najafgarh Lake

A triptych of Bar-headed Geese at the Najafgarh Lake

A visit to the Sultanpur National Park on the 19th of February turned out to be a disappointment because when my brother and I reached the park, it was to learn that it had been closed to visitors since the Governor was visiting it later in the day. However, the closure of the National Park was a blessing in disguise as we then decided to locate the 'Sultanpur Flats' but ended at the Najafgarh Lake close by! We were pleasantly astonished by the huge scale of the wetland and the huge number of birds we could spot there. The Sultanpur National Park doesn't even play second fiddle to the Najafgarh Lake. The Bar-headed Geese that had been missing from the Sultanpur National Park were present in huge numbers, and they were not even scared of us, unlike the birds in the Sultanpur National Park. We were able to spot Brown-headed Gulls, Sarus Cranes, Open Billed Storks, Spot-billed Ducks and Greylag Geese in large numbers.

A flock of Bar-headed Geese stretches across the horizon!

A visit to the Najafgarh lake will afford one a close glimpse of Open Billed Storks in large numbers. Incidentally, the juvenile storks have closed bills while the adult ones have bills that are open in the middle, hence, Open Billed Storks.

The Sage-An Open billed Stork in the morning sun

Open Billed Storks face-off

A Sarus Crane pair watch a flypast of an assortment of Ducks and Ibis


It was a great surprise to spot a large number of Brown-headed Gulls at the lake. What I took to be the ubiquitous Lapwings turned out to be a large number of Gulls, both Brown-headed as well as White-headed wading on the water. I was able to capture one of these in flight, not a very clear photograph, but then distinct enough to identify it as a Brown-headed Gull!

Brown-headed Gull

Brown-headed Gull

Brown-headed Gull

The Najafgarh Lake is fed by the Sahibi River, an ancient canal that draws water from the Yamuna River in Delhi. Lately, damage in the embankments of the river caused widescale flooding of the area causing it to become a massive wetland, that doesn't mean that the Najafgarh lake is a new wetland. In fact, historical evidence suggests that the area was a wetland in the past too. Bar-headed Geese come out rather nicely in photographs, provided you are close enough to them, without of course spooking them. 




Open Billed Storks foraging for food at the Najafgarh Lake

Bar-headed Geese at the wetland








Saturday, 19 February 2022

Better Wildlife Photography-Photographing Emotions and Behaviour

Face-off  (Juvenile Asian Antelope greeting each other)

Are you bored with the wildlife photographs you take? Could it be because most of them are predictable, two dimensional and perhaps boring? A large number of wildlife photography initiates would believe that the best wildlife photographs are the ones with birds flying and carnivores leaping to the kill. Unfortunately, this is far from true! Some of the best wildlife photographs tell a story. A photograph that has a human interest angle to it will definitely stand out from the others.

The Contortionist - A Juvenile Painted Stork enjoys a scratch

People often believe that photographing wildlife requires simply a zoom lens, a DSLR and a tripod, along with camouflage clothes and the typical wide-brimmed hat. The fact is that the truth is far from what is described in the previous sentence. While, no doubt, having the necessary equipment and clothing goes a long way in capturing some of the most iconic photographs, there is much more that is required in terms of skills. Patience and persistence are important values that can help you take some amazing wildlife pictures. Sometimes, wildlife photography enthusiasts focus on motion photography, especially flying birds and animals in motion. I too used to focus on flying birds but then realised gradually that photographing bird and animal behaviour can be most fulfilling. There is, often a great story in photographs that capture bird or animal behaviour, especially when this behaviour focuses on adults and juveniles! In some cases, it is a great joy to see adult birds and animals displaying affection towards each other. Good photographs tell a story, they don't just capture a moment.

Juvenile Painted Storks sparring with each other

One of the most important skills one needs to develop as a wildlife photography enthusiast is the ability to observe the behaviour of animals and birds, to learn to predict their actions and to have an eye for behaviour. In this blog of mine, I will focus on the typical behaviour of wildlife including bonding amongst siblings, parental bonding and general curiosity of wild animals towards the photographer. All this is possible only when the photographer is able to creep in close enough to the subject without frightening it away. Moving noiselessly, avoiding abrupt movements, blending in with the background, avoiding creating long silhouettes can all help one observe animals in their natural habitats. 

Face-off

Visitors to the National Parks will often have come across larger mammals like the Asian Antelope and smaller mammals like the Golden Jackal sizing them up. This could also be an example of wild animals displaying behaviour that is indicative of their sense of feeling threatened by the presence of human beings. The animal-human conflict is exemplified by this aggressive posturing by these resident animals. 

A Male Asian Antelope stands guard

A curious Golden Jackal faces the photographer

The eyes say it all!

Observing animals and birds in their natural environments, moving around comfortably and being able to capture their interactions and behaviour amongst themselves can be a most fulfilling moment. I have concentrated on Jackals, Sarus Cranes, Painted Storks and Ducks in general. Even looking at the more commonly found pigeons in the backyard can offer great ideas for meaningful wildlife photography!

Two Pigeons share an intimate moment

Animals and birds have emotions. The love that a mother Crane shows for her child is relatable, and so is the joy of going for a scratch in the morning! The sight of two juvenile antelopes facing each other is rather like a silent greeting between siblings. A picture of a mother Antelope feeding her calves is something that one can relate to as a human being! In these rather difficult times of the Pandemic, lockdowns, online classes and work from home have all robbed us of the emotional support of our peers, friends and family members. Looking at wildlife displaying emotions is something that helps us salvage remnants of feelings that we have for each other. I have thus selected a few of my photographs that depict emotions in wildlife, especially as a suggestion for taking meaningful photographs of wildlife that inspire us to be more human!

Singing and scratching in unison

Sarus Cranes do things in unison. They sing together, scratch together, forage together and fly together. It is interesting to see how the dominant partner starts the song which is followed by the partner. These photographs were taken at Najafgarh Lake.

A pair of Sarus Cranes sing in unison

The male Sarus Crane stands guard while the female grooms herself

Sarus Cranes enjoying a grooming session

Sarus Cranes grooming themselves for the day

A grooming session

The equipment I use includes two DSLRs, a Canon 1300D and a Canon 1500D. The lenses include a Canon IS II 55 - 250 mm and a 70-300 mm Canon EF 70-300 mm IS II USM lens. The reason why I don't use a bigger lens is that I like travelling light. While I do carry a tripod at times, I feel that it limits your movements. As far as clothes are concerned, wearing a pair of jeans, tees with muted colours and a cap are a must. My favourite camera settings include an ISO range of 100 to 400, a shutter speed ranging from 1/320 to 1/800. For metering, I choose between spot metering or evaluative metering options. For the focus, I use the single focus or AI focus.

Some of the best wildlife photographs record the maternal instincts of mothers feeding their offspring. Mammals will feed their offspring milk while birds will root up in the shallows to bring out delectable crustaceans and other food for their offsprings. These photographs were taken at the Sultanpur National Park.

Mother and Daughter bonding

Sarus Crane mother helping a juvenile clear its beak



Momma's love - Female Asian Antelope feeding  her calves














Saturday, 5 February 2022

A Visit to Chippiwara in Old Delhi-A Gastronome's Treasure Trove





An unplanned visit to Chippiwara in  Old Delhi in the evening led to a culinary experience like never before. Moreover, looking at the place where my brother in law had lived as a child, led us through numerous alleys and gateways that reminded me of the stories of the early days of Delhi under the numerous rulers who held sway two or three centuries ago. Although this was a rather hasty visit, it was replete with sensory experiences of sizzling delights to titillate the taste buds. Among the things that we enjoyed were the Shahi Sheermal, Shahi Tukda and the Kebabs and Nihari. The Sheermal prepared by Haji Nadeem is of the best kind. There is a variety of these sweet bread. The one costing Rs. 40/- has dry fruits in it and it can be eaten plain. It is a must-try food item if you are visiting the Jama Masjid area. I am sharing a few photographs of the Sheermal for you to see.







The kebabs prepared by the Al Jawahar restaurant in the lane are succulent and dissolve in the mouth. We ordered the same from the restaurant and brought them home to enjoy them later. All we did was heat them in a pan with a dice of butter. I am sharing a few photographs of the kebabs sizzling in the pan.








The entire street comes alive in the evenings when the food stalls come to life. In fact, it is only during the evenings that one would be able to enjoy the street food on offer. One stallholder even told me that his day started at 6:00 p.m. and went on into the wee hours of 3:00 a.m. in the morning. During the day, the Commercial part of Old Delhi comes to life. The wholesalers for stationery items, textiles, brass items and many other such items do brisk business. 








The narrow alleys, twisted lanes and ancient faded frescos, ornamental arches, and the numerous iron gates stand testimony to the place's medieval historical significance. The narrow alleys and gates were necessitated by the need to defend the area from the large number of marauding soldiers belonging to various invading armies from other countries who wanted to plunder the city.