Sport and Work on the Nepaul Frontier - Twelve Years Sporting Reminiscences of an Indigo Planter by James Inglis
page 113 of 347 (32%)
page 113 of 347 (32%)
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very beautiful. There is first the common green parrot, with a red
beak, and a circle of salmon-coloured feathers round its neck; they are very noisy and destructive, and flock together to the fields where they do great damage to the crops. The _lutkun sooga_ is an exquisitely-coloured bird, about the size of a sparrow. The _ghur[=a]l_, a large red and green parrot, with a crimson beak. The _tota_ a yellowish-green colour, and the male with a breast as red as blood; they call it the _amereet bhela_. Another lovely little parrot, the _taeteea sooga_, has a green body, red head, and black throat; but the most showy and brilliant of all the tribe is the _putsoogee_. The body is a rich living green, red wings, yellow beak, and black throat; there is a tuft of vivid red as a topknot, and the tail is a brilliant blue; the under feathers of the tail being a pure snowy white. At times the silence is broken by a loud, metallic, bell-like cry, very like the yodel you hear in the Alps. You hear it rise sharp and distinct, 'Looralei!' and as suddenly cease. This is the cry of the _kookoor gh[=e]t_, a bird not unlike a small pheasant, with a reddish-brown back and a fawn-coloured breast. The _sherra_ is another green parrot, a little larger than the _putsoogee_, but not so beautifully coloured. There is generally a green, slime-covered, sluggish stream in all these forests, its channel choked with rotting leaves and decaying vegetable matter. The water should never be drunk until it has been boiled and filtered. At intervals the stream opens out and forms a clear rush-fringed pool, and the trees receding on either bank leave a lovely grassy glade, where the deer and nilghau come to drink. On the glassy bosom of the pool in the centre, fine duck, mallard, and teal, can frequently be found, and the rushes round the margin are to a certainty |
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