
Pushkar is a holy town around a sacred lake. It was mentioned in the most ancient Hindu sources. People must even take off their shoes when they are near the water.
Of course, nobody would hunt birds at such a place, and, I guess, fishing is banned there too.
This respectful attitude to nature makes local birds quite tolerant of people.
This image is my entry for Show Me A Photo Contest Round 247
Never-ever seen kingfishers so close. This chubby Pokemon dude was watching the water and hunting fish only 4 meters away from me. Love his seriousness... and can't help to remember those videos on social media, for example (not mine):
Too fast... And the legs are too short to get free, lol...
Another careless bird:
The black-winged stilt.
You can see many of them at Pushkar Lake, and, if you're careful, they'll allow you to approach very close.
When gibbons are walking, they hold their hand raised as they are too long. Flight of stilts looks just as clumsy.
If you are a birder and want to quickly find where to start: go to this bridge and look over it:
It's easy to birdwatch at this "bay" adjacent to Hotel Moon Lake; also, the Western shore hosts cormorants and geese. Saying about November and December.
In the same area, near Hotel Moon Lake, they have another bridge, which makes a great multi-apartment complex for birds:
Do yo use those holes? They are all taken by birds, mostly, by pigeons, but there are "ethnic minorities" either, lol:
A parakeet!
Not far, a red-wattled lapwing was searching for juicy insects in a muddy puddle.
Another large feathered tribe is the mynas. Great and common mynas are widespread in Thailand. In Pushkar, I found a species, new to me, bank mynas:
They are numerous in Pushkar, and don't mind being very near to people, like, sitting at the next table at a restaurant, lol - waiting for food from visitors - I had this experience.
Mynas belong to the "Starling Empire", and thus are smart guys and great song performers. Somehow, you can see their intellect in their eyes - like, if they look inside of you...
I feel they actually read human body language and facial expressions to understand if you are dangerous or just curious or passing by. Just a feeling. Many birds only look at how far you are and if you are watching them.
Geese! What beautiful birds!
No idea who they are but I like them!
I found a bigger flock at the Western shore of the lake.
But this group had only 3 individuals. I visited this corner of the lake three times, and each time these sentinels were on duty. The black bird in the image is a cormorant...
Cormorants are divers, and you can recognize them from far thanks to their habit of floating in the water like "a drowning duck" - with only the neck outside the water.
I instinctively want to save the life of the drowning bird, but then "ah, that's a cormorant" 😄
Then, they need to dry their feathers. This one was doing it right on the shore - never seen this species so close.
But on the Western shore, they have a more comfortable place for basking:
Such an amazing lake of tranquility in the middle of Rajasthan - full of birds! I rank this town 10 from 10 from the point of birding, and, thus, place Pushkar 🇮🇳 in my personal top of best birdwatching cities along with Bangkok 🇹🇭 and Songkhla 🇹🇭
Hope you enjoyed the story, stay tuned! 🙂
The photos were taken with a Nikkor 70-300mm on a full-frame DSLR Nikon D750 in the third week of November 2025, in Pushkar, Rajasthan, India.
This post has been shared on Reddit by @x-rain through the HivePosh initiative.
You can check out this post and your own profile on the map. Be part of the Worldmappin Community and join our Discord Channel to get in touch with other travelers, ask questions or just be updated on our latest features.
Congratulations, your post has been added to the TravelFeed Map! 🎉🥳🌴
Did you know you have your own profile map?
And every post has their own map too!
Want to have your post on the map too?
- Go to TravelFeed Map
- Click the create pin button
- Drag the marker to where your post should be. Zoom in if needed or use the search bar (top right).
- Copy and paste the generated code in your post (any Hive frontend)
- Or login with Hive Keychain or Hivesigner and click "create post" to post to Hive directly from TravelFeed
- Congrats, your post is now on the map!
PS: You can import your previous Pinmapple posts to the TravelFeed map.Opt Out
This post has been manually curated by @steemflow from Indiaunited community. Join us on our Discord Server.
Do you know that you can earn a passive income by delegating to @indiaunited. We share more than 100 % of the curation rewards with the delegators in the form of IUC tokens. HP delegators and IUC token holders also get upto 20% additional vote weight.
Here are some handy links for delegations: 100HP, 250HP, 500HP, 1000HP.
100% of the rewards from this comment goes to the curator for their manual curation efforts. Please encourage the curator @steemflow by upvoting this comment and support the community by voting the posts made by @indiaunited.
Congratulations @x-rain! You received the biggest smile and some love from TravelFeed! Keep up the amazing blog. 😍 Your post was also chosen as top pick of the day and is now featured on the TravelFeed front page.
Thanks for using TravelFeed!
@for91days (TravelFeed team)
PS: You can now read your favourite travel blogs on your phone. Plus, blogging on-the-go just got easier! Download our app on the Apple App Store or get it on Google Play.
A lot of plastic trash in the sacred lake....
Great shots!
i love geese but this one wins