The high-resolution image of a lifer is to a birder what a new degree certificate is to an overqualified but still compulsive degree hoarder. For the elucidation of the chirp-challenged constituency, a lifer is a bird species a birder has clapped eyes on for the first time; and the rarer the feathers, the more treasured the photo of the bird that has been clicked. Birder Sagarika Gupta is disconsolate with the disappointment of a studious person who has completed a rare and brow-bending degree successfully, but is denied a certificate acknowledging it for some strange reason.
On April 21, during a morning walk at the Adyar Poonga, a Slaty-legged crake had crossed Sagarika’s path, and if she had ever bitterly regretted not having a camera with a telephoto lens at hand, this was the time.
Only the previous week, after multiple applications, Sagarika had secured a walker’s pass, one that provided her access to the green facility for walking, and not photographing avian life or anything else. As she puts it, the walker’s access comes with well-etched restrictions, and a camera is on the restricted list. She therefore had to make do with the marble phone, and with it, she clicked a video of the bird that was strutting around in a heavily shaded undergrowth.






