Salelkar the Wild Cat
Six in the morning and I am sitting in the jeep that is bouncing along the
stony wildlife trail leading into the depths of the Mollem National Park. Behind
the wheel sits Prakash Salelkar, his coarse and ruggedly handsome face frowning
into a grim expression. The brow is furrowed.
‘I can’t believe your bad
luck,’ he says finally. ‘There is usually not a day when we don’t sight animals
now.’
But I am actually enjoying myself. I have come here to see the forest.
If I should see an animal it’s an added plus point.
Dawn filters grey colour
through the densely packed trees and when the jeep stops at a stream an eerie
stillness and silence hangs in the jungle air. The stream gurgles like a sleepy
baby and snakes over smooth pebbles meandering through the giant trees on its
banks. I make a promise I am coming again sometime.
The previous night I had
had a chat with Salelkar: he was sitting limp in his office chair, exhausted
after interrogating a conductor for illegally carrying about a hundred live
crabs on a bus to Bangalore. Salelkar emptied the bus of both, the crabs and the
passengers, and it was a good while before the conductor and the driver had
signed all his forms to get their vehicle back.
I had a look at the crabs
and I was as stunned as Salelkar was earlier. Each crab was bigger than two
palms of my hand put together, and the biggest ones measured more than ten
inches across the carapace. Salelkar was actually checking for Star Back
Tortoises, a protected reptile whose illegal trade still continues across Goa’s
borders.
Salelkar began his wildlife career in 1975 as a watchman for the
forest department, earning six rupees a day. In 1980 he joined the department as
a Round Forest Officer, and balancing eight transfers by the year 1985, moved up
to the post of Deputy Forest Officer at Collem. At present he holds the post of
Range Forest Officer and his total working years in Collem alone amount to
eleven.
‘I have covered every inch of this forest on foot, and I know my
forest like the back of my own hand,’ he says proudly. I notice he uses the word
‘my’ often when talking of the forest and its animals. Sentences like ‘my
leopard will not eat your polluted cattle’ betray the fanatic possessive nature
of a man madly in love with ‘his’ forest and its inhabitants. His most memorable
experience: Once when he was sitting quietly next to his jeep in the forest, a
leopard unawares walked within six feet of him. Salelkar doesn’t romanticize the
memory.
‘It was one of the scariest moments of my life,’ he smiles. ‘But the
leopard just looked at me and walked away unconcerned.’
Mollem sanctuary
holds Gaur, tiger, leopard, deer – spotted, Sambhar, barking and Mouse –
Pangolin, wild boar, Sloth bear, Slender Loris and three endemic mammals i.e.
the Brown Civet Cat, the Indian Flying Squirrel and the Brown Napped Mongoose.
There are also a variety of birds and snakes as well. The largest venomous snake
in the world i.e. the King Cobra is also found here. Recently one of these huge
reptiles strayed away from the forest to enter a school area in Mollem. This 12
foot long snake was captured by Salelkar and a colleague, Amol, and returned to
the forest.
Salelkar is also the man instrumental in bringing to justice
persons involved in the killing of eight Gaurs in the Mollem sanctuary. The Gaur
is our state animal. Each of these massive animals stands six foot at the
shoulder and can weight up to a ton.
These Gaurs used to cross over a
plantation fence to feast on the crops of banana and pineapple. They were
electrocuted and killed immediately on touching the charged single wire circuits
laid around the plants.
This serial killing of the Gaurs took place between
11th June and 27th August this year. Apparently after the Gaurs were killed,
they were quickly buried away in pits at the plantation site.
Salelkar
himself wouldn’t have found out about the mass killing if it had not been for
one of his Forest Guards patrolling the nearby area. The guard found an
unusually large skeletal specimen lying on the forest floor. Salelkar says he
himself patrolled the area the whole night after that so that the offenders
wouldn’t tamper with evidence. The first thing in the morning he organized a
raid on the killers. Before long he had found the remaining skeletons concealed
in pits dug all over the plantation.
As a Range Forest Officer, Salelkar’s
activities include patrolling for poachers, habitat and water management, civil
works and ecotourism which brings 16-17 lakh visitors to the Dudhsagar
waterfalls annually.
He complains bitterly, however, of the infrastructure
and facilities, considering he has only three Forest Guards and two Round Forest
Officers to manage the 240 square kilometers of forest under him. Collem Range
Forest on the other hand possesses twenty four Forest Guards, five Round
Foresters and one Range Forest Officer just to monitor 150 square kilometers of
forest.
As I leave Goa’s largest wildlife sanctuary, I ask Salelkar one
final question. ‘Do you entertain visitors at the sanctuary?’ I am sure many of
my friends would be dying to come here once they hear these stories.
‘Of
course,’ he says happily. ‘The sanctuary is everyone’s to enjoy. Provided the
only thing they leave behind when they depart are their footprints and the only
thing they take away from it are their sweet memories.’
Two days ago, I read
that a full-grown panther was killed in a hit-and-run outside the Mollem
Wildlife Sanctuary. Salelkar was soon found at the scene. The car left no
footprints. But it left a big hole in Salelkar’s heart. I suggest you call him
and cheer him up atleast-----2605872