A tiny tidy looking bird about the size of sparrow, purely arboreal they are seen in pairs or small parties sorting from one branch to another foraging for insects. They have characteristics of Shrikes-dark eye bands, moving in groups; as also the ways of Flycatcher-insect catching sallies, the structure of bills. Found in jungles and bushy terrain. I am seeing this bird after quite a long time. Spotted this one at Gudavi Bird Sanctuary. Gudavi is a great place to be in, it reminded me of Bharatpur with its spread out shallow lake and swarming avian species (don’t forget the binoculars). Another thing about Gudavi is that it is located in quite a remote region so there aren’t many people around, a man at the gate slept also saw an old woman who seemed to talk to herself. The place is maintained rather well- in particular the pathway through bamboo groove-but be careful there are snakes. Since it is spread out across acres of shrubby jungle you could locate both arboreal and water birds (sighting Malkoha and tiny Jungle Owlet was dream come true, these were eluding me for many years! Will write about it in later blogs). Gudavi is a must in the itinerary; i stayed at Sagara-a small town near Sirsi- about two hours from Shimoga. I recommend you stay opposite to private bus stand since early morning about 6to6.15 there is a direct bus to Gudavi-it takes about 3hours through verdant vista. Return journey could be a problem since buses aren’t frequent, don’t crib it’s a great place to walk (I walked few Kms till i got the bus, it’s better than waiting. When you are in green surroundings its quite difficult to stand still, you walk on your own, there is always some kind of excitement). Alternatively you could go to Surba from here there are frequent buses to Sagara. And yes those who give too much importance to matters of stomach, there aren’t any eateries in and around Gudavi. I though haven’t heard anyone dying of not ingesting for couple of hours, indeed i only had light dinner for two days! Body stores food as fat for these kinds of situations, the reason i prefer body to work it out and do what is expected. After travel i am generally down by 5to10 Kgs, back to city and life on laptop body switches off for mind and accumulating fat. In last many years my weight has fluctuated between 60 to 90kgs!!. More like birds when you accumulate enough body weight time to fly!! A.K.RamanujanI am not yetmay never bemy futuredependenton severalpeopleyetto comeAK Raman
ujan (1929-1993) was born in Mysore he did his studies in India and later shifted to US, he took up teaching assignments. He was also translator, folklorist and a linguist. Ramanujam happens to be one of my favourite Indian English poets (it is strange that some of my favourite Indian English-indeed the best- poets Kolatkar, Moreas, Ezekeil died on the same year: 2004), he was also fluent in Kannada and Tamil. There is something ethereal and mythical about his poem, yet the sight and smell is so familiar. This blog is never going to be enough to talk about his poems (my earlier scribble ‘Carbon units’ has some elements of influence from Ramanujan).Though this blogger partly agree with ‘context sensitive’ Indian way of thinking that differentiates from westerners, but would argue that these ‘contexts’ are elitist (read brahminical conception) that didn’t quite percolate but were imposed. Ramanujan- a brilliant man no doubt, suffers from MN Srinivas’s Sanskritisation, that inflicts quite a few social scientists. These are partly true understandings that have some serious generalisations, and arising from certain section could even be patronising. People at the lower strata generally are more practical- not because they are born that way it is that they have to face realities at the harshest, therefore despite the imposed impediments of ‘contexts’ they have negotiated their life remarkably well all these centuries. Religion at the level of lower strata is utilitarian for existential purpose while for elite it is utilitarian for power. Very few have religion for spiritual or egalitarian reasons. Ramanujan’s father, Srinivas Ramanujan, was a famous mathematician. He describes his father: “He was a mathematician, an astronomer. But he was also a Sanskrit scholar, an expert astrologer. He had two kinds of visitors: American and English mathematicians who called on him when they were on a visit to India, and local astrologers, orthodox pundits who wore splendid gold-embroidered shawls dowered by the Maharaja. I had just been converted by Russell to the 'scientific attitude'. I (and my generation) was troubled by his holding together in one brain both astronomy and astrology; I looked for consistency in him, a consistency he didn't seem to care about, or even think about”.
This poem "Astronomer" is an attempt to make sense of his father's seemingly contradictory image. AstronomerSky-man in a manhole with astronomy for dream, astrology for nightmare; fat man full of proverbs, the language of lean years, living in square after almanac square prefiguring the day of windfall and landslide
through a calculus of good hours, clutching at the tear in his birthday shirt as at a hole in his mildewed horoscope, squinting at the parallax of black planets, his Tiger, his Hare moving in Sanskrit zodiacs, forever troubled by the fractions, the kidneys in his Tamil flesh, his body the Great Bear dipping for the honey, the woman-smell in the small curly hair down there. On death of a PoetImages consult one another, a conscience- stricken jury, and come slowly to a sentence. A RiverIn Madurai,city of temples and poets,who sang of cities and temples,every summera river dries to a tricklein the sand,baring the sand ribs,straw and women's hairclogging the watergatesat the rusty barsunder the bridges with patchesof repair all over themthe wet stones glistening like sleepycrocodiles, the dry onesshaven water-buffaloes lounging in the sunThe poets only sang of the floods.He was there for a daywhen they had the floods.People everywhere talkedof the inches rising,of the precise number of cobbled stepsrun over by the water, risingon the bathing places,and the way it carried off three village houses,one pregnant womanand a couple of cowsnamed Gopi and Brinda as usual.The new poets still quotedthe old poets, but no one spokein verseof the pregnant womandrowned, with perhaps twins in her,kicking at blank wallseven before birth.He said:the river has water enoughto be poeticabout only once a yearand thenit carries awayin the first half-hourthree village houses,a couple of cowsnamed Gopi and Brindaand one pregnant womanexpecting identical twinswith no moles on their bodies,with different coloured diapersto tell them apart.Extended familyYet like grandfatherI bathe before the village crowthe dry chlorine watermy only Gangesthe naked Chicago bulba cousin of the Vedic sunslap soap on my backlike fatherand thinkin proverbslike meI wipe myself drywith an unwashedSears turkish towellike motherI hear faint morning song(though here it soundsJapanese)and three clear stringsnextdoorthrough kitchenclatterlike my little daughterI play shyhand over crotchmy body not yet fullof thoughts novelsand childrenI hold my peepeelike my little sonplay garden hosein and outthe bathtublike my grandsonI look upunbornat myselflike my greatgreat-grandsonI am not yetmay never bemy futuredependenton severalpeopleyetto comeThe Black HenIt must come as leaves to a tree or not at all yet it comes sometimes as the black hen with the red round eye on the embroidery stitch by stitch dropped and found again and when it's all there the black hen stares with its round red eye and you're afraid.