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| Green Tips |
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| Travel Tips |
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Travelling in the wildernesses requires a special sensitivity.
The laws of the jungle are different but there are several
ways to get the best out of your 'Wild Travel' without disturbing
the habitats you visit. Bring back only beautiful memories.
Some tips that you can use from those who've been there
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On forest trails
Jungle etiquette
When you're out birdwatching
For divers
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On forest trails
Charting your course
- Use a map and trace out the route you intend to take.
Always carry a compass and travel in groups with an experienced
guide.
- Make enquiries as to the safety of routes before venturing
out. The office of the Field Director is the best source
of information.
- Always inform someone at your base camp of the route you
intend to take for excursions into the forest.
- While inside the forest frequently switch off your engine.
Sit quietly and listen to the birds. In a moment or two
the insects will pitch in and, through the undergrowth,
you might just hear gurgling brooks, and if you read the
alarm calls of chital, sambar and langurs, you might well
see the tiger anyway.
- Keep ever-vigilant and if you have company in your vehicle,
it is always a good idea to sit facing different directions
so that you are able to double the chances of spotting animals.
Clothing
- Dress in muted forest colours like greens and dull browns.
- Wear comfortable walking shoes, travel light and don't
forget a hat!
- High boots with socks are a sensible option on jungle
walks.
- Always check your shoes before you wear them to check
for creepy crawlies like scorpions that love dark places.
- It is advisable to carry woollens with you in the winter,
since the nights may be cold.
- Go easy on the perfumes, deodorant, aftershave, etc. -
Such fragrances can also attract biting insects.
Don't forget!
- Since the fire hazard is a serious problem, please do
not smoke, and carefully put out every last timber in your
campfires before leaving.
- Keep a sensible first-aid kit handy and always travel
with enough food and water for at least 24 hours (chocolates
are a great, compact energy option).
- Binoculars, a good bird book and a camera are essential
to a good trip.
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Jungle etiquette
- Try to avoid weekends, because the place becomes overcrowded
with noisy picnickers and the tranquillity of the forest
is often disturbed.
- Try not to talk too much or make loud sounds. Do not carry
tape-recorders and disturb animals.
- Do not litter the park. In fact, pick up non-biodegradable
materials and deposit them back at camp.
- Do not get too close to the animals or startle or disturb
them in any way. And don't ever attempt to feed animals.
- Drinking alcohol and carrying arms and ammunition within
the precincts of the sanctuary is strictly prohibited.
- Check whether swimming and fishing are permitted in the
lakes and follow the law.
- While staying inside the forest conform to the 'no bright
lights' unspoken rule or you could have beetles and other
insect life as hard-to-get-rid-of companions for the night.
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When you're out birdwatching
- Don't look for birds in a forest. Just let your eyes wander
to detect movement where nothing else is moving.
- Edges or ecotones, where one type of landscape merges
into another, are usually sites of greater activity, especially
at dawn and dusk, rather than inside the habitat.
- Birds need water and streams, ponds, fountains, especially
with nearby protective cover are all excellent spots.
- Forest birds tend to move in mixed flocks. One of the
best tactics to catch sight of these is to determine the
flocks' direction, get ahead of them and wait for them to
follow you. This way, you don't disturb them and you have
maximum time to get the field marks.
- Most birds can distinguish colours very well and you scare
them off (or at least alert them) It's a good idea not to
wear blue or red! Dress in mute greens and browns.
- Noise is an absolute no. Don't chat on the trails and
try and wear fabrics that don't make much of a sound. A
noisy camera shutter is inexcusable.
- Enjoy all your birds - there aren't any 'better' or 'more
exotic' species and if the birds are where you are, stay
and watch for you may not see any more that day!
- Carry a notebook in which to record your observations.
Important details that you might wish to keep a record of
would include the date, time and place, species observed,
sex of the bird, unusual behaviour, if any, type of habitat
(thick or sparse forest, hilly terrain, dense undergrowth).
- Carry a good bird book with you, which would help you
identify the birds you see. The more enthusiastic might
even want to go equipped with a micro-cassette recorder
or video recorder. Either way don't miss out on capturing
the joy of the sights and smells in your memory.
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For divers
- Always dive with a buddy and check your gear twice over.
Diving is safe, if you are careful.
- Choose a very good dive shop/group to deal with. Don't
go back to your organisers if you see them dumping garbage
overboard, or flushing their toilets in the sea prior to
coming back to land.
- Insist on learning buoyancy control perfectly, even at
the risk of irritating your instructor. Quite apart from
the fact that this is an essential diving skill, it will
also prevent you from damaging corals by landing with a
thud on them!
- Securely fasten your gauge console, dive computer/octopus
to your BC to prevent it from snagging on the reef.
- Don't touch hard corals. They can be damaged very easily.
They can also cut and poison you. In fact, unless you have
some very specific reason to, try not to wear gloves because
you are then tempted to handle corals.
- Don't push sediment and sand from your fins on to corals
they could be choked to death. When you want to go down
to look at something, don't go feet first. Instead keep
a head-down position with your fins away from the reef or
bottom.
- Keep your movements slow and steady and for heaven's sake,
don't grab slow-moving sea animals such as puffer fish,
or octopus.
- Riding sea turtles is a bad idea. They are easily stressed
and you could make them scared of all divers.
- Read up information about the site you are going to visit
and contact a local environmental group to find out how
you can support their defence of the marine havens you visit.
- Take another instruction to refresh your skills if you
have not dived for a year.
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