Katwal - Our Conservation Officer Prameek Kannan guides village children on nature trail |
Katwal - Our field assistant Kishor Dudhbarai points out birds to children on nature trail |
Vishank Bhoskar with his new SUV. Trained by us as a driver, he now earns 25,000 rupees a month. |
Kutwanda - Ravindra Kannake, trained as driver through us, stands next to jeep that he drives in the Tiger Reserve |
Mudholi - Dayanand Jambule, trained as driver through us, poses next to truck that he has bought to transport goods |
Katwal - Youths and school children clear plastic litter from village |
Katwal - Volunteers who participated in cleanliness and anti-plastic programme |
Udiya Tola - Our Conservation Officer Prameek Kannan addresses villagers on conservation and local issues |
Dewada - Village youths attend programme organised by us to discuss livelihood options |
THE FULL REPORT
Team:
Conservation
Officer – Prameek Kannan
Field
Assistant – Kishor Dudhbarai
Highlights
·
3 cleanliness drives in Katwal with 89
participants
·
1 ‘Gaon ki mann ki baat’ meeting in
UdiyaTola with 30 participants
·
3 education programmes were conducted
with 125 participants in Kondegaon and Katwal, including nature, trails, bird
watching and classroom lectures
·
2 skill development training awareness
sessions were conducted with 22 participants in UdiyaTola and Dewada
·
6 youths placed as gypsy drivers, temporary
driver, and tourist taxi driver after going through our 4-wheeler driver’s
training programme
·
Our mobile health unit treated 499
patients in Moharli, Bhamdeli, Sitarampeth, Kondegaon, Katwal, Khutwanda
Conservation
A meeting was held in UdiyaTola on the 8th of
February to discuss livelihood and conservation issues in the village and was attended
by 30 villagers. The villagers said that there was a serious livelihood problem
here and they would like help on the same.
After several meetings organised by us, an arrangement has
been made that on every Monday, there will be a garbage collection drive in
Katwal, which started this month.
As a part of this initiative, 3 cleanliness drives were held
in Katwal on the 13th, 20th and 28th of
February, with 89 participants. Efforts are underway to implement similar
initiatives in the other villages as well.
Education
On February 10th, Kishor and Prameek took 26
students from Katwal ZP School on a bird-watching excursion around Katwal Lake
near Katwal village. Many species of water and forest birds were spotted on
this excursion, such as black drongos, red-vented bulbuls, 3 species of egrets
(cattle, large, little), grey herons, flocks of migratory ducks such as
pintail, red-crested pochard, and most exciting of all 4 pied kingfishers
hovering and diving into the water to catch fish, a spectacular sight that
really captivated the young students. Most of the birds were new to the
students, and reciting their names in Marathi and English was a great, fun way
to initiate interactive learning and appreciation for the wild denizens that
live around their village. In addition, tracks and scat of wild boar and nilgai
were also seen by the lakeshore. They had apparently come down to drink the
previous night.
Mobile
Health Unit
Employment
Placements for month of February 2017:
Our 4-wheeler driver’s training programme undertaken during
the months of November and December 2016 was extremely well received with 40
villagers signing up for the program. This program empowered 6 villagers to take up employment, 2
of whom even took loans to buy their own vehicles.
Vishant Bhoskar was one of these two, as he has taken a
loan to purchase a brand new Mahindra Xylo for 13 lakh rupees and is now
earning 25,000 rupees a month as a tourist taxi driver. He is thankful for the
driver’s training programme and is excited about his future prospects, and is
spreading awareness amongst his friends and neighbors on how such skill
development programs can result in big financial gains for the local
communities, as it has for him.
Dayanand Jambule is an enthusiastic resident of Mudholi
village, who is thankful that the training program has empowered him to take a loan to purchase a Tempo Traveller, which he uses to transport goods,
fetching him 25,000 rupees a month. Jambule also spreads awareness amongst
members of his community on the benefits of such skill development programs,
and how they can help obtain lucrative opportunities away from forest
dependency.
Three more youths, trained in our driver’s training
programme, have started driving tourist vehicles (Maruti Suzuki Gypsys) at
Khutwanda and Moharli gates. Two of these 3 are from Khutwanda, a village that
is 15km from Moharli, the tourist hub village of the Tadoba buffer. Mr. Nagpure
and Kannake are thankful for the opportunity that our programme has provided
them, and they are excited at the future prospects burgeoning around Khutwanda
gate. He says that more locals of Khutwanda and nearby villages are now trying
to becoming gypsy drivers to provide service to new resorts and home stays
coming up around Khutwanda gate, which is 18 km from the tourist hub Moharli.
Such initiates are helping spread the benefits of wildlife tourism further
across the buffer area villages.
After the locals of UdiyaTola and Dewada brought up the
issue of livelihoods in their villages, Prameek brought Parimal Gangrediwar
from RSETI Chandrapur to conduct awareness sessions on free training programmes
for skill development provided by them. The locals here are quite under-qualified
and local cottage industries such as tailoring, and making bamboo artefacts would really improve their livelihood options, something which RSETI can help with. RSETI – Rural Self-Employment Training Institute – is run by Bank of India in Chandrapur.
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