Wolf & Woods · Khajjiar, Himachal Pradesh
Among the Wings
of Khajjiar
Dawn arrives differently here. It does not simply lighten the sky — it fills the forest with voices.
Scroll to read ↓A Symphony
in the Pines
I have spent many mornings in the hills, and I will tell you this — the ones I remember best are not the ones when I had anywhere to be. They are the ones when I stepped quietly into the forest before the world had fully woken, and simply listened.
At Wolf and Woods, we have always believed that Khajjiar's greatest luxury is not something you find inside a cottage. It is the sound of a Whistling Thrush breaking into song on a dew-wet branch, just as the first light catches the deodar tops above Kalatop.
That is why we began our Guided Bird Walks — not as an activity, but as an invitation. An invitation to slow down, to breathe the pine-cool air, and to let the forest do what it has always done so well: surprise you.
"The hills have a way of keeping their secrets until you learn to be still. And it is the birds, I think, who teach us best how to be still — for they will not come to the loud and the hurried. They come to those who wait."— From the journals of Wolf & Woods, Khajjiar
Khajjiar, Himachal Pradesh · 6,500 ft above sea level
What the Forest
Keeps for You
Khajjiar and the surrounding Kalatop sanctuary shelter over 120 recorded species. Here is a small portrait of who you might meet.
Kaleej Pheasant
The Kaleej moves through the undergrowth like a rumour — you sense it before you see it. The male is dressed in dark, glossy plumage with a bold red face, as though the forest gave one bird all the confidence it had.
Lophura leucomelanos · Found in dense scrub and forest edges; most active at dawn and dusk.
Koklas Pheasant
Secretive and wonderfully stubborn about being found. You are far more likely to hear the Koklas first — its loud, abrupt call rising from thick cover like a small argument no one expected. Patience, and it will reveal itself.
Pucrasia macrolopha · Listen for its sharp call in dense oak and rhododendron thickets.
Asian Barred Owlet
Unlike most owls, this one keeps rather civilised hours. It is often out in the late afternoon, perched quite openly on a low branch, regarding the world with those wide, unblinking eyes as though mildly disappointed in it.
Glaucidium cuculoides · Diurnal; look for it on exposed perches in mixed forest, especially at dusk.
Oriental Scops Owl
The forest's finest ventriloquist. On an evening walk, its rhythmic, hollow call seems to emanate from the trees themselves — all around you, and nowhere at all. A small bird with a very large talent for mystery.
Otus sunia · Strictly nocturnal; identified almost entirely by its distinctive repetitive call after dark.
Verditer Flycatcher
If you need a reason to look up, the Verditer will provide one. The male is an almost impossible shade of blue-green — the colour of glacial water or old turquoise — and it sits quite unself-consciously at the very tops of trees, as if it knows it is the finest thing in view.
Eumyias thalassinus · Favours open perches at canopy level; a winter visitor to these altitudes.
Blue Whistling Thrush
The great musician of the Himalayan stream. Its song — wild, unhurried, full of long liquid notes — follows you down every trail near running water. Slate blue with those distinctive yellow patches, it sings as though it has all morning and intends to use every minute of it.
Myophonus caeruleus · Found near hill streams and boulder-strewn banks; sings from prominent rocks.
Yellow-billed Blue Magpie
Perhaps the most theatrical bird in our forest — a long-tailed flash of cobalt and white sailing between the pines with the casual elegance of something that knows exactly how beautiful it is. It arrives with noise and departs with even more.
Urocissa flavirostris · Often seen in small, vocal parties moving through the canopy in loose processions.
Grey-headed Woodpecker
Before you see it, you will hear the deliberate, resonant drumming against a dead trunk — a sound the forest seems to absorb and return from all directions. The grey head and green back make it rather distinguished-looking, as woodpeckers go.
Picus canus · Look for excavation marks on older deodar and oak trunks; most active in the morning.
Great Barbet
The voice of the Himalayan summer. Its loud, repetitive call — kutroo, kutroo, kutroo — fills every valley from April onwards with a sound both mournful and insistent. The bird itself, when you find it, is surprisingly beautiful: a heavy blue head, richly patterned body, bright yellow bill.
Psilopogon virens · India's largest barbet; calls from high in the canopy, most persistently at dawn.
Blue-throated Barbet
Compact, jewel-bright, and almost absurdly colourful — crimson crown, blue throat, vivid green back. It moves through the fruiting trees with efficient purpose, as though it has a great deal of eating to accomplish before midday, which it probably does.
Psilopogon asiaticus · Found in broadleaved forest; attracted to fruiting figs and similar trees.
Himalayan Griffon Vulture
Look up, and keep looking. Over the ridgelines above Dainkund, if the thermals are right, you may watch a Griffon hang motionless against the blue — a creature so vast in wingspan and so ancient in bearing that the sky seems borrowed from another age entirely.
Gyps himalayensis · Best spotted mid-morning when thermal updrafts build over open ridgelines.
Black Kite
A master of the casual glide, the Black Kite rides the air above the meadow and village edges with an ease that borders on the indolent. Watch for the distinctive forked tail — the field mark that separates it from the other dark shapes overhead.
Milvus migrans · Highly adaptable; often seen soaring over open ground and forest margins.
Bay-backed Shrike
Small, fierce, and absolutely certain of its own importance. The shrike perches upright on a prominent twig — back chestnut-warm, rump white, mask severe — surveying its territory with the focused intensity of a bird that has decided it is in charge of this particular bush, and possibly the one behind it as well.
Lanius vittatus · Look for it on exposed perches at forest edges; a methodical hunter of insects and small prey.
Two Hours with the
Unhurried World
Our walks wind through the trails of the Kalatop Wildlife Sanctuary and the hidden glades that border our property — places where the deodar canopy closes overhead and the forest floor is still soft with last season's needles. Our local guides have spent years learning these paths, not just with maps but with their ears. They know which tree the Monal visits at dawn. They know the particular branch where a pair of flycatchers has nested for three years running.
This is not a hurried activity, checked off between breakfast and checkout. It is, if you allow it, the kind of morning that stays with you — the kind you find yourself telling someone about, weeks later, unprompted.
A Few Words from
Someone Who Knows These Paths
Dress Like the Forest
Greens, browns, greys — earthy tones that let you disappear against the trees. The birds are not shy, exactly; they are simply uninterested in anything that announces itself too loudly.
Mind Your Feet
The forest floor rewards those who dress for it. Comfortable hiking shoes or sturdy sneakers — not sandals, not slippers. The trails are gentle, but they are still mountain trails.
Bring Binoculars
Your own are best, because you know them. But if you haven't any, do let us know when you book — we keep a few pairs at the lodge. A good pair of eyes will also do, though you may miss the amber of a Monal's eye at forty feet.
Silence is the Entrance Fee
The forest does not owe us its secrets. The more quietly we move, the more generously it gives. I have heard guides say they have seen more birds with a single silent guest than with six talkative ones.
Leave the Phone Away
Or at least, leave the ringer off. The impulse to photograph everything is understandable — resist it, at least for the first hour. See with your eyes first. The memory you make that way will outlast any photograph.
Arrive with Patience
The hills will not hurry for you. Sometimes the Monal appears in five minutes; sometimes it doesn't appear at all. That is precisely the point — the walk itself, not the tally, is the gift.
The Forest Is Most
Generous at Dawn
Walks are available daily for Wolf & Woods guests, by prior booking. Availability is limited to six guests per walk — because some things are better experienced quietly, and in small company.
Bird walks are complimentary for guests staying two nights or more. Day-visitor bookings available on request.