1.Why had the ravine become a little haven for wildlife?
2. Which animals did the author regularly see and hear every morning?
3. Why were the birds and animals not disturbed by the presence of the author in the forest?
4. What reason does the author give for the presence of a leopard so close to Mussoorie?
5. Briefly describe all that the author saw and felt when he reached the top of Pari Tibba.
From chapter No Room For A Leopard
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The ravine was so deep that for most of the day it remained in shadow. This encouraged many birds and animals to emerge from cover during the hours of daylight. Few people ever passed that way. As a result, the ravine had become a little haven of wildlife, one of the few natural sanctuaries left near Mussoorie
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- The ravine was so deep that for most of the day it remained in shadow. This encouraged many birds and animals to emerge from cover during the hours of daylight. Few people ever passed that way. As a result, the ravine had become a little haven of wildlife, one of the few natural sanctuaries left near Mussoorie.
- The Leopard.
- The Leopard.The bat.
- The Leopard.The bat.The Lion.
- The Leopard.The bat.The Lion.The hyenas.
- The Leopard.The bat.The Lion.The hyenas.The cheetah.
- SORRY DEAR DON'T KNOW
- The leopard, like other members of the cat family, is nearing extinction in India, and I was surprised to find one so close to Mussoorie. Probably deforestation had driven the deer into this green valley; the leopard, naturally, had followed.
- A little far from his cottage, down the hill, Ruskin goes for a walk around a stream. After some time, the trail of the path disappears in the forest and a stream appears, its water making a soft gurgling sound flowing down the ravine. The ravine is so deep that below only shadow appears, nothing else.
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