My Cormorant Tree

Posted by Dev Baul - 13/03/20 at 07:03 am

My first brush with cormorants was in a Bengali rhyme ‘পানকৌড়ি পানকৌড়ি ডাঙায় উঠনা’ – ‘Cormorant(Pankouri), O Cormorant stay in the water’ . Interestingly the Bengali moniker connotes a glutton or a diver. There can not be an apter description of this bird’s behavior – it is a voracious eater and moves around in deep waters like an otter. In Bengal, fish farmers lay crisscross ropes laden with colored swags above their ponds to keep away the cormorants.

A Satyajit Ray story was my second encounter , wherein Ray talked about how cormorants would use their lungs as ballast tanks as in a submarine to float up or dive into the water. Much later in life did I learn about a US defense department research project in which a submersible aircraft (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lockheed_Martin_Cormorant) called Cormorant was to be developed. While inside a submarine tube the aircraft’s wings would be folded around itself and while floating up to the surface , wings would unfold in preparation for launch – very similar to the Cormorant Bird’s under-water and in the air movements. Is that Science imitating life !!

 

Flying Submarine Cormorant
Photo Credits Mike Hanlon ( https://newatlas.com/the-cormorant-mpuav/5372/)

My third meeting with cormorants in the world of words was in the least likely of places – in a Bond Novel, where one would not expect to accost birds with feathers. In “You Only Live Twice” Bond takes refuge in a Japanese fishing community. Fisherwomen out there would not use nets or lines – instead, they would use their cormorants for fishing. A snare would be put around the cormorant’s neck to prevent it from swallowing bigger fish. The bird with a fish in its gullet would be brought back to the boat and made to spit the fish out into the bin of ‘fresh catch of the day’!!

 

Fisherman with one of his cormorants. The bird’s throat snare is on the bird’s neck.
Photo by Frédéric Lemaréchal, alias Maboko – Originally from fr. Wikipedia;

Having grown up in antediluvian pre-internet times, I did not get to see a cormorant in a picture or in flesh and feathers till I hit my early 20s. From my reads, a certain mystical imagery had developed in my mind about cormorants. Thus, the first sighting at Joka Marshes, my institute campus in Kolkata) was laced with a sense of underwhelm. Here was a bird with an ungainly body, dull feathers and an awkward low flight. But then it started growing on me – I started noting and marvelling at its aircraft-like take off with run-up ; its landing using its webbed feet as landing gear; the periscope-like look of the head with the body inside the water; the sudden disappearing dive and the equally sudden erupting reappearance 100 feet away. The voyeuristic affair continues – hopefully till I hit the bucket.

I am a newbie birdwatcher and get fascinated by the things that seasoned birders would brush off with a knowing smile. Paths of cormorants and mine have crossed a few times, but no other meeting has been as unexpected as the one in the heart of a desert in Dubai. It was an artificial lake made with desalinated sea-water. The lake was in a large residential complex. This was not an aviary, but a whole ecosystem created with desalinated water !! I have recorded Bulbuls, Cormorants, Lapwings, Hoopoes in Dubai – most are introduced or vagrant species not native to Dubai.

Collective noun for a group of cormorants is an unusual but fitting word – sunning. Sunning is what a sunning of cormorants needs to keep doing when out of water. A cormorant with its wings spread out in a sunning position is the most photographed pose of the bird

 

Cormorant Sunning

Protagonist of our story, My Cormorant Tree is housed in Rabindra Sarobar , an artificial lake created by the British – a creation as grand as the Victoria Memorial or the Howrah Bridge. I guess it is home to some 500+ cormorants and they regularly compel me to interrupt my walk and watch their antics. That my cormorant tree is thriving in a lake surrounded by a concrete jungle is a most gratifying bliss.

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23 Responses to “My Cormorant Tree”

  1. Sushmita Banerjer says:
    March 13th, 2020 at 1:44 pm

    Beautifully observed details and penned down equally well.

  2. amazelia says:
    March 13th, 2020 at 3:28 pm

    Thank you , Thank you. Appreciate you for taking the trouble of commenting on the site

  3. Pramit Baul says:
    March 13th, 2020 at 2:26 pm

    I’ve grown up listening to you telling tales of the Cormorant aka Pancowrie in Bengali so it’s fitting that your first post is about it. You’ve made a bold move of taking this step and I’m really proud of you Baba!

  4. amazelia says:
    March 13th, 2020 at 4:17 pm

    Well , that is really encouraging – hope to post the next on in near future

  5. Ramprasad G says:
    March 14th, 2020 at 11:44 am

    Superb writing and equally great photography Dev Baul ! Chhupa rustam with such talent!😄 Ramprasad

  6. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:28 pm

    Thank you.Did you notice that talent is an anagram of latent

  7. kratu9 says:
    March 14th, 2020 at 11:38 pm

    Good stuff, Pratap! Nicely written … I learnt a thing or two from here. Look forward to more …

  8. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:27 pm

    Thank you . Can not identify from your id kratu9 – please quench my curiosity

  9. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:35 pm

    is that you Arabinda

  10. besamal says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 11:38 am

    Brilliant piece.

  11. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:04 pm

    thank you

  12. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:37 pm

    Is that you Shyamalda

  13. besamal says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 11:41 am

    This line seems incomplete “The voyeuristic affair continues – hopefully till”. Am I missing something?

  14. amazelia says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 7:04 pm

    Read ‘I kick the bucket’ for the dots that follow till . LOL
    Thank you for such attentive reading – you do not miss much

  15. DHRUVA KUMAR SEN Father LATE SHRI DEBENEDRA PRASSANA SEN says:
    March 15th, 2020 at 11:52 pm

    Very well written and the man behind the lens is equally adept with putting his thoughts together. Treat to read this post.

  16. Jayant Bhattacharjee says:
    March 16th, 2020 at 2:13 pm

    You have displayed a remarkable penchant for words and birds. For “probashi bengalis like me”, the imagery provoked by your “descriptive lyrics”, evokes a nostalgia in me.
    Will wait for your next post with great expectations.

  17. Anand Sudarshan says:
    March 21st, 2020 at 4:04 am

    Dev – I enjoyed reading the piece very much, and the pix are great too..! This is an explosion of latent talent (to be anagramically accurate), and I look forward to more such. Regards. Anand Sudarshan

  18. amazelia says:
    March 23rd, 2020 at 12:51 pm

    ‘latent talent’ and ‘Elvis lives’ are my favourite anagrams 🙂

  19. rpradhanblog says:
    June 2nd, 2020 at 8:27 am

    Wonderful post.

  20. amazelia says:
    June 2nd, 2020 at 1:24 pm

    thank you

  21. send2arnab says:
    January 14th, 2021 at 6:11 am

    Very well written and thoughts penned down perfectly ..looking forward to the next one

  22. amazelia says:
    January 14th, 2021 at 7:52 am

    Thank you – hopefully soon

  23. SUDIP says:
    January 14th, 2022 at 11:29 am

    You are an expert ornithologist and too good a photographer as well. Do you need any comment from a novice in these areas. I shy away from doing this. 🙏

    We are proud of you, Sir.

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