Green Vine Snake feeding on Shieldtail
Green Vine Snake feeding on Shieldtail

This is a guest post by Vineet Panchbhaiyye who joined us (among other tours) on our Goa photography tour in August 2013. While we were on a nature trail one evening in Goa, Nirmal Kulkarni (eminent herpetologist and our nature expert on the tour) got…

Rainforest Photography – How far were you?
Rainforest Photography – How far were you?

  When I show this photograph to my friends, they often pose this question to me – “How far were you from the snake?” There is a deep sense of concern in their question (in most cases). The snake in the photograph  is a  Saw-scaled Viper (Echis…

Rainforest Showcase – Lantern Bug Scape
Rainforest Showcase – Lantern Bug Scape

  Photograph Description – I have found the sheer beauty and diversity that rainforests offer very fascinating. While we all have our wishlist of the ‘sought after species’ like snakes, other reptiles and amphibians, there is much more to the rainforest than just that. I…

Rainforest Showcase Art Everywhere
Rainforest Showcase Art Everywhere

Art Everywhere Photographed by Radha Rangarajan Photograph Description: Rainforests, for me, are synonymous with fungi. I love photographing fungi and I think they represent rainforests and the monsoon best. Wading knee deep in a stream one night in Valparai, I came across this cluster of…

Rainforest Showcase Shieldtail and Earthworm
Rainforest Showcase Shieldtail and Earthworm

Snake feeding on Earthworm Photographed by Vinodh Venugopal Photograph Description: It was a pleasant day with intermittent rain. During our field visit in the afternoon, we found this beautiful snake  – a Large-scaled Shieldtail (Uropeltis macrolepis) – on a pathway. The snake caught an earthworm and…

Wide Angle in the Rainforest
Wide Angle in the Rainforest

The biodiversity in the rainforest is mind-boggling. Every direction one looks in, there’s an abundance of life-forms – each of them adding to the circle of life. Since many animals, plants and fungi are really tiny, the first reaction as a wildlife photographer is…