A cool, silvery-grey dawn breaks over the Anamalai as we nudge each other awake, listening and thinking. Is the whistling-thrush singing?
Outside, mist hangs over a rolling landscape of manicured tea plantations surrounding the hill town of Valparai, our home for the last twenty-five years. We lie awake for a few minutes in the dreamworld between sleep and wakefulness. The stillness of dawn, the shrillness of a couple of crickets, silence. And then, without overture or ado, the serenade begins.
Mellow whistles rise and flow, smooth and mellifluous, waxing in through the window, waning into the distant mountains, as if the Malabar Whistling-Thrush is taunting us with song to enter the dreamscape again or draw us out into the sun-gilded morning. There are other birds calling, too:
Whooaw! Check-your- charrack-choo! shouts a Grey Junglefowl from the tea plantations, while the Red-whiskered Bulbuls chuckle from the mango tree and the busy tailorbird in the hedge goes
pitch-it pitch-it pitch-it to the
kutoor-kutoor-kutoor metronome of the White-cheeked Barbet. But it is the lilting, flowing song of the whistling-thrush, the endlessly varying tunes punctuated by a few familiar notes and piercing whistles, that is our morning benediction here in the Elephant Hills.