How an oasis was created in a rocky desert
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Pradip Kishen and his team worked hard to make a wasteland a paradise with trees, shrubs and herbs
Seventy hectares of land on the foothills of the majestic Mehrangarh
fort here was once a rocky wasteland, colonised by an invasive plant
from Mexico known as mesquite or baavlia – the ‘mad one’ in local
parlance – as it cannot be uprooted. But the painstaking efforts of a
man and his team have transformed the land into a paradise for migratory
birds, and made it home for over 300 species of trees, shrubs, climbers
and herbs.
In 2006, Jodhpur’s current maharaja Gaj Singh II of Mewar entrusted
filmmaker and environmentalist Pradip Krishen with the mammoth task of
converting this baavlia—dominated wasteland into a green zone.
It was Gaj Singh’s great grandfather Maharaja Umaid Singh’s wish to
convert this arid landscape into a green zone. To attain this, Umaid
Singh had taken a plane and dropped baavlia seeds all over the region,
unaware of its ‘dominating’ streak.
The HinduTree man Pradip Krishen. Photo: R.V. Moorthy
“When we came here, the area was thickly populated with baavlia, which
is notorious for its invasive nature. It isn’t easy to get rid of it
because it penetrates its roots deeper and spreads all around, and
doesn’t allow any other plant within its vicinity to grow,” Krishen told
IANS.
‘Rewilding’ project
After many hits and trials, Krishen cracked the code for this restoration project and called it “rewilding”.
“The wild plant is like a weed that is of no use, but disrupts ecology.
So to restore this system and make it bird–and–animal friendly, we have
followed a systematic approach and it can be best described as
rewilding,” he said.
The first challenge for the team was to uproot the plant that had made
the arid land and fissures in the volcanic rhyolite — a
750–million–year–old rock– its home.
“Even when we cut the first 18 inches of the plant, it would sprout again. Nothing seemed to be working,” he recollected.
After all technological advances failed to uproot the plant, they opted
for an unconventional ‘traditional’ route by having on board
‘khandwaliyas’, people from mining communities of Marwar whose expertise
lies in cutting sandstone.
“Rhyolites are not soft like sandstone, but we had no other option. So we gave this a shot,” he said.
“I still remember, when Dhan Singh (head of the khandwaliyas) first
struck the rock a couple of times, and then averted his eyes. I thought
something went inside his eye, till he later told me he was ‘listening’
to the sound the rock made,” Krishen said with the same fascination he
must have felt when he witnessed the episode.
Tree by tree
“It was incredible. I call it an experience of native wisdom,” he added.
What followed next was an arduous task of literally going tree by tree, slowly and patiently.
“It was one man to one bush ratio,” he saids,”... a painstaking dig deep
down into the ground as long as one could and plant plants lineally”.
It was incredible. I call it an experience of native wisdom
After everything fell into place, the park was opened for visitors.
If visited between late July and October, naturalists will be able to
spot ephemerals like rohido (maarwar teak), hingoto (desert date),
kair(bare caper), kheer kheem (rambling milkweed) and spot migratory
birds like Grey Heron, Marsh Harrier, Long Leg Buzzard amongst many
others.
“Come here now and don’t forget to come back in 10 years. There are
quite a few big trees we would like to show you,” he concluded.
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