July 8th 2025
We have waited.The sunbird
Barbets
Parakeet, kingfisher
And I.
For the rain.
Wet earth
Petrichor
Cool rain winds meet warm dank air.
How will tomorrow be.
July 8th 2025
We have waited.Genus Riopa for sure. But is it a Common Dotted Garden Skink Riopa punctata or a | White-spotted Supple Skink Riopa albopunctata, I could not say. What do you think? |
July 6th 2025
Our MRC Nagar Shaheen falcon - christened Maya - arrived this year on 30th May 2025, two days after I left the city for a stint in Bangalore.
MRC Nagar's Leela business centre building may be abandoned and unoccupied by humans, but for the birders of the city, it is a very happening building -
Vismaya the peregrine is a resident in the winter.
Maya the Shaheen is here through the SW monsoon. This is the sixth monsoon she has been sighted. From 2020 onwards.
Arrival dates: (Courtesy Sanjeev)
She's the bird with the fastest dive. Falcons are awesome. As GK, our Raptor Guru says, "It's a Shaheen female based on the longer moustachial stripe & the overall build. Shaheen Tiercels are quite compact & small, with a short broad moustachial stripe.
And we assume it's Maya based on the perches she take, her routine, all that. If another female reaches here & follows all that of Maya, it's practically not possible to find out unless they're a permanent visible clues in non-feathered parts."
I have recorded seeing her on 16th June 2024, both in the morning and in the evening on eBird.
Morning 6am was with Sagarika, Ramanan and his son.
She did a spectacular aerial display of diving, gliding and soaring over the Business Tower.
Circling the Leela building.
535 pm - circled and chased a pigeon - failed hunt.
flew around the roost area and then a little south, then circled back and was seen over the main Lee hotel for a long time.
No successful hunt observed.
June 15th 2025 pictures from Hrishu. I was not there.
Photo by Hrishu. Falco peregrinus peregrinator |
Photo by Hrishu. Falco peregrinus peregrinator |
See that little black blob on the railing? Well that is the falcon who has turned her back on us. |
Here's the Ebird list for the morning, from Hrishu.
Hopefully, I will see her more regularly in the coming weeks.
5th July 2025
Morning coffee with the Munia in my balcony. He/she comes and investigates the Kopsia pot with soft pips, quite different from the loud and piercing calls of the Tailorbird.
Off for our morning walk. It is a Saturday, the beach is buzzing with human activity of all sorts. The breakfast lady is doing brisk business, the crow feeding man is on the beach surrounded by more than a murder of crows, the dogs are lolling in the sands after their barking exertions of the night, and the Urbaser crew is hard at work cleaning up after us messy denizens. Fruit seller lorries, vegetable vendors, walkers, joggers and strolling cattle - and you get the picture.
We escape via the bylanes into the quieter Valmiki Nagar neighbourhoods, where the Indie doggies and their pet parents are having a conference, and then to the Kalakshetra road, where the girls are hurrying to dance class, the Coucals are calling in the trees and drongos are busy catching dragonflies.We head back via the large peepul tree, the ISKCON centre and boys busy putting up the announcement for a cricket tournament.
It is the shortcut back, via the Valmiki Nagar thickets that reveals all my non-human observations.
An Ashy Prinia called from the thickets and flew as we walked past.
Ravan's Mustache (Spinifex littoreus) grasses spread out on the sands and a couple of lost ghost crabs scuttled away from sight.
The Giant Calotropis plants were filled with bees, wasps and butterflies. Sekar waited patiently as I malingered and chased the gram blues, the Common Lime butterflies and the Emigrants.
Mottled Emigrant (Catopsilia pyranthe) nectaring on Flannel Weed |
The sands are dotted with this Flannel Weed - so named because the surface of its leaves are covered with fine hair, giving it a flannel-like feel. it is from the Mallow family and native to India.
Another yellow beauty. Large Caltrops Pedalium murex. Flowers of India puts the Tamil name as ஆனைநெருஞ்சி Anai-Nerunci, |
We were soon back home, armed with some greens and tomatoes from our familiar veggie vendor, who was being engaged in friendly banter by the regular walking crew.
More tomorrow, then.
4th of July
A Common Mormon female I spied
Papilio polytes- Common Mormon female in Romolus morph, where it mimics the poisonous Crimson Rose |
Refer Batesian mimicry for more fascinating stuff. |
July 3rd
On Tuesday, I went to the TTUF Nizhal park to help with watering of the semi-grown saplings there. Managed entirely with volunteers, the park is a beautiful place. I visit too rarely these days.
I joined the relay of merry and chirpy young volunteers with watering cans going up and down the central path. I had a good workout - carrying those five litre watering cans, two at a time. 😅
I watched the dragonflies and grasshoppers, heard the babblers and the mynas in the trees.
Magizham - Mimusops elengi - one spectacular red fruit with a background of dark wavy green. |
Arjuna fruits - Terminalia arjuna - hung in abundance, ridgy and starry. |
The Crepe Myrtle's purple flowering spikes were replaced by these fruits. Ripening - moving from green to this dark brown. |
And this! The Noni tree was in flower and fruit! Morinda citrifolia |
I sat this afternoon and tried to sketch them. |
Red-vented Bulbul (Pycnonotus cafer) |
28th June 2025
Monsoon Beauty 2025 starts today! For the last five years, India's Nature celebrates each monsoon with some nature appreciation and citizen science pushes. This year too, they are celebrating the Indian SW monsoon from 28th June to 7th September. here in Chennai, this is not our main monsoon, and this period is that sticky, humid, wet-blanket like phase, of still days where not a leaf stirs, and we are all also quite lifeless and low in energy.
Every few days there will be a shower that brings relief, but also makes the earth steam, and you can feel the humidity. Chennai weather is not for the faint-hearted, and definitely not for the Bangalorian. 😅
I digress - click here to know more about Monsoon Beauty 2025.
A breakfast rendezvous today morning with a friend, took me to the banks of the Adyar river. I arrived early and strolled down to the river front, hoping maybe to catch a glimpse of my friend G3 as she rowed past. But no, she was not on the waters today, but the White Breasted Water Hens were. They always remind me of Japanese Geisha girls for some reason, with their white faces, and elegant flicks of their tails. The tide was down and the banks were dry, and these Rails seemed to be finding insects. I stood on the bund and enjoyed their loud croaky calls and spidery legs.
A lone Grey headed swamp hen stared at them. I wonder if he/she knew that they were going to be rechristened as Purple swamp hens? We humans, I tell you.
A bare Prosopis tree in the distance had a speck of blue - a White-throated Kingfisher that flew with an indignant rattly call as I approached it. As I strolled back, the mynas called and hopped around on the grassy space between the Neem trees, Black Kites circled above and the parakeets screeched and flew from Neem to Rain tree.
I heard the Koels call, and then was delighted as a Coucal flew across - its rust-coloured wings catching the sunlight.
We sat on the verandah, enjoying watching the large stately trees buzzing with bird life and the shrubs below with nectaring butterflies - common lime, crimson rose, common leopard and tawny coster in abundance.
In a distant tree hole, I saw the spotted owlets too - it is their favourite hole.
I wonder why I did not take any pictures that morning. Distracted by the mushroom omelette and the fresh orange juice?
Sometimes in the quiet stillness of midday, interesting birding things happen on our balcony. Red vented bulbuls (Pycnonotus cafer) - two o...