Remembering Nepal’s Bird Man, Kazi Dai
Hari Sharan Nepali's friends affectionately called him Kazi because of his smart attire and genteel manners. And ‘Kazi Dai’ was how birders from Nepal and around the world knew the country’s most famous ornithologist.
Knowing Kazi was more than a coincidence for me: he was a friend of my father, Parasar Narayan Suwal. One was a PhD and other a school dropout, but the two bonded because of their shared love of the wilderness, often exploring the jungles of the Tarai together.
In 1972, I joined my father and his students of Ananda Kuti Science College on a weeklong camping trip to Pokhara. Kazi Dai was invited as visiting faculty to share his knowledge on the bird ecology, field identification, and bird taxidermy techniques.
The Prithvi Highway was under construction then, so the team camped by the banks of the Trisuli river in Galchi. It was here that Kazi Dai introduced us to the flashy White-throated Kingfisher.
In Pokhara, we trekked from Bagar near Prithvi Narayan Campus to Hyangja, where we were pummelled by a heavy hailstorm. Next day when we reached Suinkhet, the river was filled with debris and boulders from overnight landslides and flood. There, Kazi Dai identified the Lesser Racquet-tailed Drongo, a Green Magpie and an Egyptian Vulture.
On our return journey to Kathmandu Kazi Dai helped pointed out a showy Wall Creeper on a freshly dug mountain slope as it fluttered wings with maroon patches. His mentoring during this trip was a turning point for me to become a birder myself.
In the late 1970s, I eagerly took part in bird identification field trips with Kazi Dai and Karna Sakya, who was then with the IUCN Commission on Education. Together they founded the Nepal Bird Watching Club, which was later named Bird Conservation Nepal (BCN).
Today, BCN is a well-established professional organisation nurturing a passion for bird documentation, photography, research and conservation on hundreds of Nepali youth every year. Ornithological science has now gone on from just identifying and preserving birds to satellite tracking of their migration, and digital recording of the more than 880 species of birds found in Nepal
Kazi Dai was very accommodating and always ready to share his wealth of knowledge, and mentor budding bird watchers and naturalists.
In 1985, when I was stationed as a naturalist at Gaida Wildlife Camp, he visited Chitwan for a birding trip. Along a moist Chure river bed, we observed the flashy Sultan Tit, Black-crested Baza, Rufous Piculet, Red-headed Trogon. In Chitwan National Park, after observing a rare Bengal Florican in the grassland of Dumaria Phanta, a majestic Bengal Tiger appeared from the golden grass.
One of the noteworthy professional work we did together was documenting his ornithological knowledge during the Biodiversity Profiles Project, under the Department of National Park and Wildlife Conservation in 1995. Both of us also served as members of Environment Protection Council, chaired by the Prime Minister.
We were also in a team studying the trans-Himalayan migration routes of Bar-headed Geese along the Narayani River, the first ever telemetry study of birds in Nepal.
We successfully tagged two birds both of which travelled across the Himalaya to a lake 500km north of Mt Everest in spring for breeding. The return journey was not what we expected, the pair named Hillary and Tenzing did not stop over in Chitwan, but flew on for another 500km south to winter in India. The study was documented in the 2006 documentary Wild Goose Chase narrated by Steve Leonard.
Birding with President Jimmy Carter was perhaps another highlight of my birding experiences with Kazi Dai. We also established the Lumbini Crane Sanctuary, and the enhanced wetland in Lumbini is now a preferred home for the nesting Sarus cranes. It is supported by WWF Nepal, in partnership with International Crane Foundation and Lumbini Development Trust.
On World Wetland Day in 2021 the Trust dedicated a wetland in the sanctuary as Hari Sharan Nepali Trail as a tribute to Kazi Dai.
Kazi Dai also personally spearheaded the Ornithological Survey of Nepal to study Nepal’s vast diversity of bird species. The Natural History Museum established by Tribhuvan University is an outcome of his passion. Kazi Dai identified 13 new bird species in addition to the bird species described by Robert Fleming Sr, Robert Fkeming Jr and Lain Singh Bangdel in 1976.
Kazi Dai left us on 19 May 2021, but his passion for the study and preservation of Nepal’s birdlife lives on in the many young naturalists he mentored.
Rajendra N Suwal is the Head of Partnerships Development at WWF Nepal.
Read more: Hari Sharan nipalensis