Soldier from the Sixth Bend
Charles Dickens would start his
tales of two cities thus: “It was the
best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the age of wisdom, it was the
age of foolishness….” Often, I used to wonder whether we too are living in
such times, especially when I used to spend the moonlit nights at the Sixth Bend.
Yes, Sixth Bend is a purgatory…half
way between heaven and hell…pure Havana Cigars.
You have the warmth of nature undisturbed, and not at stone throwing
distance, you have the mad rat race and commotion, through the night. Irony of controversy, man has become
Off Sixth Bend, a small hamlet of
50 cents is owned by a retired solider, Mr. Gangadharan, who is presently a
farmer who tries to cultivate nutmeg. Retired
twice, first from the army and then from a bank, our man decided to call it a
day. He retired and saw a place for
himself (literally) amidst what is left over of the greenery of the Coonoor
slopes. The nutmeg saplings are planted
time and again, to be trampled by elephants or the gaurs. Still, Gangadharan doesn’t budge, he keeps
planting, on the hope that he will one day succeed, while the priority and
right of way is that of the wild animals.
Whatever is left over of their feed, he happily accepts. By the way, Gangadharan’s property, unlike
the nouveau rich apartment dwellers, is not a gated property, with electric
fence or compound demarcated; it is just an extension of the once well
sprawling semi-evergreen patch of the southern slopes of the Nilgiris, and now
what is little left out of the native vegetation.
Communication with Gangadharan
is next to impossible in the present context; he still lives in an age where
the smart phones were not invented. With
luck one can get his number, and communicate. The routine is that he goes to Then Tirupathi,
a temple off Mettupalayam on all first Saturdays, when one can easily contact
him and request his availability.
Gangadharan is also an herbal doctor of sorts, with many proven positive
records. His believers come to him from far and wide
and get cured too.
My relationship with him is that
of a friend, a human to the core, a conservationist, a philanthropist, a kind
hearted person in a nutshell. He too has
had his ups and downs in his personal life; still he takes life as it comes, and
at times which I observed was with a saintly magnanimity.
My birding and butterflying days
started at Sixth Bend way back in late 2012 by introduction to Gangadharan, by
my good friend Krishnamurthi. I used to
go there very often, early in the morning to capture the early morning birding
activities. Slowly the bond thickened and
I used to stay overnight during weekends, when I fully understood my DSLR as
well as birding. That was the same time
when I started my butterflying too. I
enjoyed the evenings lying down on the rocks just looking up at the moonrise,
early morning presented me with the songs of the Whistling School Boy (Malabar
Whistling Thrush), followed by the chirrups of vernal hanging parrots,
parakeets of all sorts, doves, Fairy Blue Birds to check on my bath close by. The mid day raptor visitors like the Black Eagle
and more often than not lying on my back at the rock I enjoyed the visits of gliding
lizards and at one odd occasion the helicopter rotor swivel thundering rattle
of the Great Hornbills on the silk
cotton tree. So were the mammals like barking deer, gaurs, and elephants. At the Sixth Bend, elephants are considered
as holy visitors; in fact they are expected day and night, round the year,
especially during the fruiting season.
Elephant stories of Sixth Bend will require a blog of its own.
At the Sixth bend I discovered
the world of the flying jewels. I almost
saw all my jewels for the first time from there. The beauty is that I didn’t see them in isolation;
I saw them along with bees, birds, reptiles and mammals. Just
to highlight, all my common sightings, like the tricky Common, Dark and Metallic
Ceruleans; many a flat, Rings, Grass Yellows and Evening Browns, I’ve sighted
from the Sixth Bend. I had the privilege
of watching the Common Jezebel in bloom, the Blue Admiral basking, the Sunbeams
ovipositing from Sixth Bend. The rarer Plane
and Banded Royal were sighted from the property of Gangadharan for the first
time. Many a contemporary butterflying
enthusiasts like M/s, V.K. Chandrasekaran, Ramesh Veera, Ramasamy SRK, Vinod
Sriramulu, S Jeevith, Charles Nathan and my erstwhile boss and an eminent bird
photographer Col. Antony Grossy had the privilege to visit the place.
Though Gangadharan doesn’t boast
of his place and sell it online and public media, he is content with his
hamlet, his true friends who share his vision, once entered you become his
guest. He treats you with whatever he
has and lets you enjoy his property, which is whatever that remains of true
nature.
He had accompanied me willingly,
without much ado in almost all my butterflying trips throughout the Southern
slopes, more so during my walks at Kallar.
A personality with a difference, he is a true conservator to the core. Gangadharan has to be emulated by all at this
juncture.
Story courtesy - Manoj Sethumadhavan, Wellington, Coonoor




Great..spent many butterfly walks with this army man
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ReplyDeleteSuperb manoj
ReplyDeleteWonderful article. Thanks for introducing us to Mr Gangadharan. Can’t wait to meet him personally at his den.
ReplyDeleteSuperb write up. When I first met him, he appeared almost cryptical to me. I love his envious lifestyle. He is fit even at 67 years. Fitter than many of us city slickers! An unassuming gentleman of the wilderness. Well done Mr. Manoj.
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