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When the world hit pause in 2020, I was lucky to be in places that allowed for a front-row seat to nature’s fabulousness. It fuelled my love for birds! 

 

Every dusk and dawn, my windows became a Nat Geo documentary: Malabar-Pied and Grey Hornbills trumpeting like regal brass bands, Paradise Fly-Catchers flitting in perfect choreography, orioles painting the sky in sunshine hues, and Drongos playing Houdini among the branches. Bulbuls provided the daily gossip, while Streak-Throated Swallows zoomed past in high-speed cameo roles.

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This page holds a small collection of birds I’ve been lucky enough to see and photograph.

Over the course of the pandemic the visi
This Malabar Pied Hornbill was the first
Malabar Pied Hornbills were among the first birds I noticed from my bedroom window in Goa during COVID, and the joy that sighting brought me then, and still does, is unparalleled. I may never fully understand the evolutionary logic of their extraordinary beaks, but I did once watch one put it to excellent use in a victorious standoff with a bully crow. In a particularly surreal moment, I even caught a male Malabar Pied Hornbill appearing to hold a brief conversation with my dog. Fun fact: female Malabar Pied Hornbills have white patches around their eyes; males do not.
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This female Paradise Flycatcher visited everyday for almost a month © Nisha Maria DSouza
Golden-fronted leafbirds are expert camouflagers and it took me hundreds of tries to get t
If you have time to inspect a Fork-taile
This female Striated swallow choose my b
This Striated Swallow was none to please
Scaly-breasted munias are as chatty as they are suspicious _p © Nisha Maria DSouza_edited.
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Copyright © 2025 Nisha Maria DSouza

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