India’s Only Man-Made Sanctuary – A Green Dream That Took 15 Years To Sprout!
India’s Only Man-Made Sanctuary – A Green Dream That Took 15 Years To Sprout:
Read
how one man’s vision and perseverance led to the creation on India’s only
man-made sanctuary. It took 15 years of convincing villagers and enlisting
their participation, but the beautiful forest is now replete with fauna and
flora. Although the man is no longer among us, his legacy still exists for all
to see, appreciate and enjoy. Truly, a life well spent!
When a journalist named D. M. Mohite visited the famed Tadoba sanctuary in 1970, he was amazed by the way this forest was being nurtured and protected. And he sadly remembered how an entire forest in his native village of Devrashtra in Sangli was being destroyed by the wanton felling of trees and the insatiable grazing of cattle.
Instantly he saw a vision
of the dry mountain slopes in his village being nursed back into the green of
health. But it took him 15 tenacious years to convince the villagers and the
powers-that-be to actually do it.
This
forest is called Sagareshwar Sanctuary, and it’s the only man-made
sanctuary in India where all the animals have been re-introduced.
The first thing Mohite did after he came back to his village was to get the villagers to agree to stop the grazing of cattle. Then, with shramadaan (voluntary work through physical effort), he and the villagers planted thousands of indigenous saplings across the length and breadth of this degraded forest. For years, they carried water from the nearby villages and tended to them with love and care. Once these saplings grew up to be young trees, wild animals were brought in with the help of the forest department: sambar deer, spotted deer, blackbuck, fox, wild boar, snakes, mongoose and porcupine. Birds and butterflies though just breezed in!
This forest is also a rare example of continuous upgradation by the forest department over the last three decades. First, it was declared a deer park, then a forest reserve, and then a wildlife sanctuary. It is fenced all around, except for the animal migration corridors. And all this happened when Mohite was still around.
We reached there on a
Tuesday, and fortunately the park is closed to casual visitors on all Tuesdays.
So we had the entire guest house to ourselves, as also the forest. And it’s
truly a great feeling when you have 10 square kms of forest all to yourself.
Though there were over a 100 species of
birds there, the national bird was conspicuous by its presence. Their loud
calls welcomed us, and as we walked to the first waterhole, we saw them in all
moods and poses: some on treetops with their bronze feathers glistening in the
morning light; some busy pecking on the morning dew; some perfecting their
majestic rain dance; and some gliding down from their perches and leaving
behind a streak of ultramarine blue.
But Mohan Karnat, the
Chief Conservator of Forests, Kolhapur, shared with us a stunning ecological
truth: a spurt in the numbers of peacocks is not a good sign for the habitat!
Simply because, being voracious eaters, they polish off copious quantities of
newly sprouted grass, thereby destroying the grasslands. In the true wild, this
balance is maintained by predators.
Then we saw plum-headed parakeets,
green barbets called veda raaghu for their insane flight pattern, hoopoes,
crested larks, and a whole colony of baya weaver birds.
A walk in the forest here
is enough to convince you that this is an ideal place for eco-tourism. Probably
that’s why Mohan Karnat and his dedicated team consisting of S. Zhure and S.
Naykal are busy setting up a cluster of beautifully designed cottages, a nature
interpretation centre, and an amphitheatre to screen wildlife films so that
visitors are sensitized to the forest and all that dwells in it.
Situated at a height of 2700 feet, the scenic Sagareshwar is probably the only wildlife sanctuary that has ‘Points’ like in a hill-station. So you have the Ranshool Point, the Kirloskar Point and the Mahangund Point. As we were trekking up the mountain, I realized the pressures of tourism on this tiny sanctuary.
Inside the forest is
the Lingeshwar temple that’s the twin-brother of the Sagareshwar temple
outside. So any devotee who visits Sagareshwar feels that he hasn’t collected
enough blessings, and makes it a point to visit Lingeshwar to collect some
more. Just to give you an idea, the day before we reached here was the last
Monday of the month of Shravan, and the sanctuary log showed an entry of, hold
your breath, 28,963 visitors! Signs of their devotion were littered all over
the place and over 20 people had to work non-stop to tidy up. In fact, our
guide Dokle and a young lady forest guard Devki were collecting the trash
missed by the earlier team, even as they were spotting birds and bees for us.
In the evening we
drove down to Mohityanche Vadgaon, named after the progenitor of this
sanctuary, Mohite. The idea was to spot the blackbucks that one fine morning
had decided to migrate to this village through the gaps in the fence of the
sanctuary. They had moved here a few years ago, and never came back. We did
find two groups of blackbucks on the fringes of the farmlands. Maybe they came
here looking for their alpha male, Mohite. And are still looking for him.
How to get there: Sagareshwar
is around 380 kms from Mumbai. Take the Mumbai-Kolhapur Highway and turn at
Karad. The nearest railway station is Sangli.
Where to stay: The Forest Rest House. For bookings, mail at
ccfwlkopstr@rediffmail.com or call 02312542766.
Comments
Post a Comment