BootsnAll Travel Network

The Tranquilo Traveler

The Tranquilo Traveler is a celebration of voluntourism, slow travel, and other interesting ways to see the world. Travel writer and award- winning Moon Handbooks author Joshua Berman created The Tranquilo Travel as a resource for world trippers and international volunteers, a window to the author’s travels in Nicaragua, Belize, and beyond, and an update of his books and articles.

Leopard Rehabilitation Center

Username By Joshua | September 6th, 2005 | Comments 3 Comments »

leopard_sign.jpg

Having not experienced anything resembling a traditional tourist activity for over a month (since our yoga yatra in Rishikesh), there was more than a little eagerness on our faces when we stumbled upon the Leopard Rehabilitation Center on the western edge of the Jaldapara Wildlife Sanctuary, only a few kilometers from our home in Birpara.


leo_river.jpg

Even if we hadn’t seen any big cats, the excursion was a much-needed reminder that there is indeed life beyond the dirty main drag of Birpara and the tea garden labor lines where we have spent the last three weeks since our arrival. The nine-kilometer approach road to the Leopard Center took us through a thick forest of what-once-was. Today, this paltry strip of wilderness is only a tiny island of jungle in a sea of pesticide-soaked, mono-cultured tea plantations. But from the mud-puddled dirt track of a road within the shade of moss-covered trees, the chlorophyll breeze that blew into our windows made it easy to forget all this.

We encountered numerous Boro tribespeople, who’d been given small plots of land to cultivate as a concession for the creation of the adjoining protected area. At each of these spots, a guard tower stood, both for forest rangers to guard against poachers, and for tribesmen to watch for wild elephants and tigers which came out at dusk.

leo_kids.jpg

There was a great deal of gathering going on: old women digging up crabs in the road, skinny men carrying wicker fishing nets which they used in the nearby river, and children clutching small bushels of immature ferns, or “fiddleheads,” as we used to call this nutritious treat that my friends and I collected in the forests of Northern California.

leopard_car.jpg

The leopard center itself is part of an effort to rehabilitate and release captured cats (Panthera pardus) back into the wild. It was difficult to get more information about the actual “rehabilitation”, but in the meantime, we were able to enter their enclosure (in an electric jungle safari three-wheeler) and hope for a glimpse. We were not disappointed.

leopard1.jpg

The larger Jaldapara Wildlife Sanctuary will open on September 16, after its long closure during the hot season and monsoon months. My plan is to sign up for the very first elephant-back safari ride on the dawn of opening day, a strategy I hope will ensure maximum wildlife spottings – maybe even the extremely rare and endangered one-horned rhinoceros.

But until then, the rain continues to fall and today’s survey is cancelled, since the river to the garden will be unpassable.

Category: (d) India
If you found "Leopard Rehabilitation Center" useful or interesting, please share it with others by bookmarking it at any of the following sites:
del.icio.us:Leopard Rehabilitation Center digg:Leopard Rehabilitation Center newsvine:Leopard Rehabilitation Center furl:Leopard Rehabilitation Center reddit:Leopard Rehabilitation Center Y!:Leopard Rehabilitation Center stumbleupon:Leopard Rehabilitation Center

3 Responses to “Leopard Rehabilitation Center”

j&s dordyke | September 8th, 2005 at 11:58 pm | comment link
top comment

Thank you for the leopard pictures.

jack and suleeeeey

Bert Linert | February 9th, 2006 at 7:42 pm | comment link
top comment

Thanks for this great post. You’ve got some really good info in your blog. If you get a chance, you can check out my blog on rehab center
at http://www.rehabcenter4u.com

Bert Linert
http://www.rehabcenter4u.com

Mary Anne Martin | May 5th, 2006 at 3:03 pm | comment link
top comment

This blog posting was of great use in learning new information and also in exchanging our views. Thank you.
Mary Anne Martin
http://www.rehabcenter4u.com

Leave a Reply

If you have not commented here before, please take a moment to peruse our
Commenting Guidelines.

This is a captcha-picture. It is used to prevent mass-access by robots. (see: www.captcha.net)
To prevent automated spam appearing on this blog, we ask you to demonstrate your human-ness by entering the 5 character code in the space provided. If you cannot decipher the characters, click "Generate a new image" for a new set.

 
 

  

Pages
BY JOSHUA BERMAN
Categories
Travel links
My Links
Monthly Archives