Till
the middle of the month, the mornings in Delhi had remained unusually cool for
the month of April. It had been heavenly to have early morning tea outside in
the back courtyard of our house. We are blessed in having a few trees around
our house. In between the silk cotton tree (semul) and drum stick tree, you can
easily spot at least 15 species of birds on your lucky day. Thus, we have usual
birds like sparrow, myna, brahminy myna, dove, blue rock pigeon, wood pigeons,
rosy pastors, wabblers, sun bird, robins, bulbul, crow, kite, parakeet, sun
bird, bulbul etc.




The wood pigeons had come and gone away, stopping only for a
few days for face presentation; the flock of noisy rosy pastors was in the
process of leaving; white-cheek bulbul,
kingfishers, and grey hornbills were also making occasional appearance; every
morning tree pie is trying to imitate other birds; barbets, large and small, were
heard more often than seen with their continuous, monotonous ‘thuk…thuk…’. We
do not have roosters around us, but koel has assumed its function with its
shrill call rising in crescendo and then suddenly going quiet. Unfailingly, it
gives its call at 4 am, and sometimes at 3! Where was it all throughout the
winter? Soon we shall witness crow chasing away a female koel from its nest,
but many a koel would succeed in throwing away eggs in the crow nest and laying
their own.





Gone
winters, the trees have become mad house of activities with birds of all color
and hues, shapes and sizes. The mornings occupy them with their frantic search
for food and building material. All through the winter, they had gone on
sabbatical, and now they have made their appearance to reclaim their rightful
place among trees and bushes. The insects, which had remained conspicuous with
their absence, have suddenly become visible almost in sacrificial mood,
allowing us to witness hide and seek with birds, who dart down from some
invisible spot in the tree to hunt them and insects or moths scurrying in the
grass or fallen leaves for their lives.
The mornings are no more pleasant any
longer, mosquitoes are perhaps envious of seeing us enjoying our morning tea,
and won’t let a single second pass without their sting hitting us at some
unreachable spot of the body, but the call of the birds is still fascinating
making us endure all the oppression of heat and mosquito bite.