Home FEATURED NEWS Above the clouds in India’s far east

Above the clouds in India’s far east

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The din is extraordinary. Men’s voices bounce off the partitions; girls, brightly attired in lungis and woollen shawls, emit high-pitched ululations. On the stage, beneath a picket crucifix, Nuklu Phom, a slim man in a navy shirt, bellows right into a microphone.

If you’d been introduced right here blindfolded, you’d be forgiven for pondering these had been the battle cries of warriors getting ready for a raid on a close-by village. And 60 years in the past, you’d have been proper. Until 1964, the individuals of Yaongyimchen, a Phom Naga village excessive within the mist-wreathed mountains of jap Nagaland, had been headhunting animists, however now the Baptist Church is omnipresent and at the moment the villagers are praying for the well being of their forests.

“My grandfather used to tell me about the Amur falcon, a bird that comes from a far land, across the seas,” begins Nuklu, because the tide of prayer subsides. “And now, thanks to our community’s efforts conserving them, even this small village is known in the global family.”

A large bird in flight in a clear blue sky
The Amur falcon was as soon as hunted indiscriminately, however now the numbers recorded in Yaongyimchen every autumn are growing © Alamy
A group of smiling women pose for their picture in front of a small wooden building with a cross on its roof
Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent (third from left) with native girls on the church within the village of Alayong © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent
Two men, both wearing red scarves, stand smiling. Behind them can be seen lush vegetation
Nuklu Phom (left) with Peter Lobo of All India Birding Tours © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent

Nuklu, you see, isn’t a pastor, however a conservationist. We met on my final go to to north-eastern India and I subsequently inspired him to use for the 2021 Whitley Award (generally referred to as the “green Oscars” and given yearly by the Whitley Fund for Nature to recognise efficient grassroots conservation throughout the worldwide south). He went on to win the distinguished £40,000 grant, the primary particular person from north-east India ever to take action, however he’s additionally turning to tourism as a method to assist fund his work.

One of the septet of states that make up India’s tribal north-east, Nagaland lies on the Indo-Myanmar border, its jumble of peaks sketching a line throughout the skies between the Brahmaputra and Chindwin rivers. Home to 17 distinct Naga tribes, it’s a part of the Indo-Burma biodiversity hotspot, one in every of 36 areas recognized globally. Himalayan black bear, noticed linsang and Asiatic golden cat are among the many greater than 90 mammals documented right here.

Very few tour operators journey deeply in Nagaland — most simply tick off Mon and Kohima. So, because of a suggestion from an Indian conservationist pal, I resolve to journey with Peter Lobo of All India Birding Tours. But this barely visited fold of Nagaland is new even to Peter, and so our five-day journey is each a reconnaissance mission and an opportunity for him to do a survey of fowl species within the space. The Naga’s decades-long wrestle for independence from India — a now uneasily resolved battle that’s value an estimated 200,000 Naga lives — meant that no biodiversity research had been made right here till 2010 and lots of components of the state stay unsurveyed. With little funding, progress has been sluggish.

We meet in Guwahati, a sprawling metropolis within the neighbouring state of Assam, and spend two days driving by sombre tea plantations earlier than corkscrewing up into the Naga Hills. I like Peter instantly. Laid-back and fast to giggle, he spends the journey regaling me with tales of creeping by forests in quest of the uncommon and delightful Mrs Hume’s pheasants.

A tan-coloured large cat with tiger-like markings on its head, its ears back
An Asiatic golden cat © Alamy
A brightly coloured wooden house high up in the mountains, with a view over clouds to the peaks in the distance
A view over the mountains one morning in Yaongyimchen village © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent

Yaongyimchen, like all Naga villages, perches atop a mountain, its brightly painted picket homes set alongside the backbone of a ridge. Red splashes of bougainvillea path over bamboo fences. Women stroll up dusty tracks, baskets of firewood strapped to their heads. Pigs rootle within the dust. In all instructions, a sea of forested mountains surges away to the horizon.

There’s no vacationer infrastructure right here, so I keep in one of many two bedrooms on the workplace of Lemsachenlok (the organisation Nuklu runs), a reasonably pink bungalow crowning a bluff on the fringe of the village. It’s fundamental, however I’ve a mattress, a toilet and a bucket to clean with. At night time there’s simply the hum of bugs and a sky that makes it really feel as if I’m swimming in an ocean of stars.

Map of Nagaland, India

Over supper on our first night — a feast of domestically grown greens, freshwater fish and rice — Nuklu tells Peter and me how, in 2007, after greater than a decade away learning in Allahabad, he returned to search out the village, and forests, empty of wildlife. The Naga, a individuals of famously omnivorous tastes, have at all times hunted. But cultural shifts, unemployment and the proliferation of computerized weapons had tipped the pure stability. Tigers had stopped attacking the livestock. Dynamite fishing had devastated the rivers.

A charismatic, non secular man, Nuklu took a job as head of the native Baptist affiliation and commenced to make use of the church as a platform for preaching conservation. He purchased digicam traps, paying individuals for each animal they “caught” on digicam, and used the church’s affect and his standing — he’s from an extended line of village chiefs — to persuade the locals to cease searching and logging. “You can’t lecture people,” he says, “but climate change is drying up our wells and causing our crops to fail, so people listened to my message.”

In 2010 he persuaded three villages to put aside 10 sq km of their group forest as a refuge for wildlife. He’s now working with 20 villages, all with conservation initiatives in varied phases of growth. Leopard cats, black bear and clouded leopard are among the many many species recorded right here. “We think there might be a lone tiger here too,” says Nuklu, a smile unfurrowing his forehead.

A blue sky full of birds in flight
‘A sky stippled black with so many falcons that they looked like clouds of gnats’ © Alamy

But their largest success has been the Amur falcon, a hardy little raptor that undertakes an epic spherical journey every year between its Mongolian breeding grounds and southern Africa. In late October, the falcons pause at roost websites throughout Nagaland to gorge on flying termites earlier than crossing the Arabian Sea.

Previously hunted indiscriminately, below Nuklu’s aegis the numbers recorded in Yaongyimchen every autumn have elevated from round 50,000 to not less than half 1,000,000. On my final go to, recording a BBC radio documentary in late 2019, I witnessed this myself: a sky stippled black with so many falcons they appeared like clouds of gnats. It was for his work conserving the falcons — which breed in the identical space the Phom imagine their ancestors as soon as migrated from — that Nuklu obtained the Whitley Award.


We spend the following two days exploring the jungles round Yaongyimchen with Nuklu and Emjun, a wiry former hunter with weather-beaten options and a lottery of remaining enamel. Emjun leads the best way, slashing a path along with his machete, whereas Peter — ears like a desert jackal, digicam on the prepared — lags behind, busily counting birds. White-browed scimitar babbler. Slaty-blue flycatcher. Long-tailed broadbill. Chinese rubythroat. Spot-throated babbler. By the top of our journey he’s recorded 103 species — together with, rarest and most excitement-inducing of all, a bunch of spot-breasted parrotbills.

We wade by waist-high grasses, scramble up dusty slopes and duck by thickets of banana palms. There’s the churr of bugs, the crowing of jungle fowl and the fixed, quavering name of blue-throated barbets. Lianas tumble from the excessive branches of ficus bushes. A bronzed drongo flits overhead, the daylight casting it iridescent inexperienced.

A small bird perched on a branch. It has a yellow chest and blue head and back
A slaty-blue flycatcher . . .  © Alamy
A bright green bird with yellow and black head is perched on a branch, a piece of grass in its beak
. . . and a long-tailed broadbill © Alamy
A view down over a river as sun shines through mist
A river flows by the Nagaland panorama © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent

At one level we enter a cathedral-like grove of bamboo — the autumn roost of the Amur falcons — tall, muscular stems enfolding us into forest. Emjun tells me he used to shoot about 70 falcons every day and promote them within the native market. What made him cease, I ask. He factors at Nuklu and smiles. “It’s been hard, hunting is in our blood,” he says. “But I’m proud of what our community is doing.” He now works as a labourer, and Lemsachenlok has offered him with pigs and a ginger plantation. If extra vacationers come, he hopes to earn cash as a information.

On the second day we cease for lunch beside the Dikhu, a large, clear river flowing between spilling banks of jungle. I sit on a boulder, consuming rice, dal and bitter-tasting jungle greens with my fingers from a banana-leaf plate, feeling as if I’ve stumbled upon paradise. Water like polished jade slips and gurgles over rocks. Plumes of bamboo arc down from the riverbanks, casting patterns on the water’s floor. Otter prints pad alongside the river’s edge. An awesome Mormon butterfly, black and as massive as my hand, dances on the foreshore.

From Yaongyimchen we drive an hour east to Yongphang, slaloming by jungle-covered mountains on a newly asphalted highway. A smaller, poorer village simply 12 miles from the border with Myanmar, Yongphang has palm-thatched huts that huddle beneath an enormous white church. Here Nuklu reveals me the morung, a grand previous constructing carved with life-sized tigers and warriors clutching severed human heads. Little used lately, morungs had been the place the younger males used to sleep, put together for conflict and dangle their freshly hunted trophies. Outside this one lies the touchdown gear of a US C-46 aeroplane, one in every of a whole lot that crashed right here whereas flying provides to Chiang Kai-shek’s China throughout the second world conflict.

I stick with cousins of Nuklu’s, a garrulous couple referred to as Tange and Bhenla, in a easy picket home hung with church calendars and buffalo skulls. It’s not a homestay as such, as a result of no vacationer has ever been right here earlier than, so I sleep of their teenage daughter’s room, amongst household images and her assortment of crimson leather-based purses.

Men crouch on the ground around pieces of bamboo that are cut and shaped like beakers
Villagers in Yaongyimchen make bamboo flagons © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent
A smiling man who wears a bright red coat and necklace made of tusks
A Phom Naga elder in Yaongyimchen; he wears wild cat hat and the tusks of untamed boars which he hunted himself © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent
A brightly painted wooden hut
A morung, a conventional assembly place for younger males © Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent

The subsequent few days are spent strolling by cool, quiet submontane forest. Evenings are spent speaking to Bhenla and Tange by the open hearth of their swept-earth kitchen. On my first night time, a puckish elder with a whispering voice comes to examine the foreigner, perching on a low stool beside the fireside. When I ask him what he enjoys about dwelling right here he thinks onerous for a couple of minutes, then says: “We grow our own food. We help each other. People don’t covet wealth, we’re happy with what we have.” I write his reply in my pocket book, and underline it a number of occasions.

The journey isn’t excellent, and this form of journey isn’t for everybody. No, I in all probability didn’t must see the muddy pond the place, legend has it, a legendary big rhino was as soon as slain by the Phom. Or the cave the place an Ahom king as soon as hid, which is now a haunt for native youngsters. But journey like this can be a rarity: unpolished, genuine, a window on to a really completely different lifestyle, one wealthy in beneficial classes. Moreover, amid the despair of biodiversity loss, individuals like Nuklu are a beacon of hope, proof that passionate people can result in extraordinary change.

On my remaining morning I rise early to admire the view from the sting of the village. Overnight, mist has sunk into the seams of the hills and now, so far as the attention can see, an archipelago of mountains floats on a white sea. No surprise the Phom name themselves “people of the clouds”.

In the space rises the blue wall of the Patkai ranges, the Indo-Myanmar border. Occasionally, Nuklu tells me, you possibly can see the peaks of the Himalayas on the far horizon, and the Brahmaputra glinting on the plains beneath. But even with out these, the view is stupendous. It’s wild, untamed nation and, like the remainder of my time right here, elixir for the soul.

Details

Antonia Bolingbroke-Kent was a visitor of All India Birding Tours (allindiabirdingtours.com) and Air Vistara (airvistara.com). Peter Lobo’s tailored cultural and birding excursions value from $150 per particular person, per day. The greatest time to go to is in late October/early November, to coincide with the Amur falcon migration. Air Vistara flies from London to Guwahati, through Delhi, as soon as day by day, with return costs from £875

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