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Have you tickled it at its exit?” asks
wildlife filmmaker Mike Hari Pandey, as his
assistant peers into a large cardboard
carton that houses a baby kite with a broken
wing.
“Their mother usually do that to make them
excrete,” he explains.
Pandey should
know, for he’s used to playing surrogate to
the numerous animals and birds he has shaped
his life around.
His gut-wrenching film Shores of Silence:
Whale Sharks in India, on the disappearance
of the badi machchli from coastal
Gujarat, jolted the international community
to out law the hunting of these creatures.
It also got him the top award at the annual
Wild Screen film Festival – popularly know
as the Green Oscar – held at Bristol every
year.
His latest muse is Indian Vulture, “nature’s
municipal corporation” – also the subject of
his latest documentary Vanishing Vultures.
“I
couldn’t have made this film without the
older footage I had, “says the burly
filmmaker,
settling into his workspace
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at
Riverbank Studios in South Delhi.
“Back in the 70s, I
used to travel a lot. I remember filming
vultures around abattoirs in Kanpur, Madhya
Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh. Once, we came
across three fresh carcasses; within minutes
at least 20,000 vultures descended and
stripped them bare.”
There were so many birds that his crew were
worried that Pandey would be attacked.
He didn’t have to travel far to spot the
resilient scavengers. They were everywhere
around poultry farms in Saket, South Delhi,
near Janpath, and some even hovered over the
Prime Minister’s house.
Today, thanks to Diclofenac, a pain reliever
and anti-inflammatory veterinary
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