Sunday18November
Today, we reach the city of Bharatpur, very close to Keolado National Park, a reserve of over 200 birds.
The Dausa Temple
On the road near the town of Dausa, we make a short stop to enter this temple that catches the eye because it's so colorful. It's simple, it looks like it was made with lots of marshmallow candies!
Keoladeo National Ornithological Reserve
After lunch at the Bharatpur hotel, we head to Keoladeo Park, located right next door.
To enjoy the park, you just need to hire the services of guides and their tricycles.
And from time to time, our two guides point their fingers towards the inside of a tree, swearing there's something there... Of course, you don't see anything, at least not at first glance, but by insisting a little, you eventually see the camouflaged bird. Here, it's an owl, perhaps a spotted owlet (Athene brama)?
Some rose-ringed parakeets (psittacula krameri) attempting a tone-on-tone camouflage with the background foliage, but I'm not fooled!
The park is truly pleasant and relaxing, home to 230 bird species. The site was inscribed on the UNESCO World Heritage list in 1985.
Oh, this isn't a bird if I'm not mistaken... No, it's a nilgai antelope (boselaphus tragocamelus), this is the third time we've encountered these blue bulls since the beginning of the trip.
And presto, our guides point their finger at a tree again. Oh yes, I see it, it's another owl, still a spotted owlet???
The highlight of the show, the majestic painted storks (mycteria leucocephala)!
This large bird, at least a meter tall, seems to be a true tightrope walker, it looks so easy for it to stay on the treetops.
A little cormorant (phalacrocorax niger). A great fan of drying its wings wide open towards the sun...
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On the left, an oriental darter (Anhinga melanogaster) alongside little cormorants (phalacrocorax niger).
On the right, another little cormorant, it's web-footed so very comfortable in the water.
Here are our stork friends again. Zoom in on the photo to see with what dexterity it holds itself on this thin branch... Respect! It even seems to make it laugh!
This must be the breeding season because it's the only time they gather in such large numbers. Usually, the stork lives alone or in pairs.














































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