Photo: Dey.sandip · Wikimedia Commons
I am not a serious birdwatcher, the kind with a long lens and a life list, but a dawn at Nalsarovar nearly turned me into one. We pushed off from the jetty while it was still dark, the boatman standing at the back with a long pole, and by the time the sky went pink the water around us was alive with birds. Flamingos in the distance stood in a loose pink line, pelicans paddled past close enough to see their eyes, and the whole shallow lake shimmered silver. I did not say much for the first hour, and neither did anyone else in the boat.
Nalsarovar is a large, shallow wetland southwest of Ahmedabad, and in winter it becomes one of the best places in Gujarat to see migratory birds. The water is rarely deep, spreading out in a wide sheet dotted with reed islands, which is exactly the kind of habitat that draws waterfowl by the thousand. From roughly November to February the migrants arrive from as far as Central Asia and beyond, and the place fills up with wings. Go at dawn, take a boat, and let the birds come to you.
The magic of Nalsarovar is its shallowness. A wide, low sheet of water full of reeds and small islands is a buffet for wading and dabbling birds, safe from most predators and rich in food. That is why the winter migration crowds in here. On my trip I saw greater flamingos, both white and rosy pelicans, several kinds of duck, herons, cranes and a scatter of smaller waders I could not name. The regulars say lucky visitors also catch sight of rarer species, so bring binoculars even if, like me, you are only a casual watcher.
Timing is everything. The birds are most active and the light is best in the first couple of hours after sunrise, before the day warms and the crowds arrive. Come mid-morning and you will see fewer birds and share the water with more boats. I would strongly push you toward a very early start, uncomfortable as that alarm is, because the difference between six in the morning and nine is enormous out here. Winter is also the only sensible season; outside the cool months the water shrinks and the migrants are gone.

Shallow open water at first light, the kind of stillness that draws thousands of winter birds.
The way you see Nalsarovar is by flat-bottomed boat, poled slowly through the shallows by a local boatman, and choosing a good one makes the trip. Mine had grown up beside the lake and knew where the flamingos gathered and how close he could drift without spooking them. Agree the price and the length of the ride before you set off, because it is easy to get talked into a longer or shorter trip than you wanted. A shared boat keeps costs down, but a smaller group means less noise and better sightings, which matters more than you think.
Sit still, keep quiet, and the wetland stops hiding; the birds decide you are not a threat and carry on their morning.
A word on doing it right. These are wild birds resting and feeding during a hard migration, so the boatmen who race up to a flock for a photo are doing real harm. Ask yours to keep a respectful distance and to switch off any engine near the birds. Do not shout, do not throw food, and take your litter back with you. The best sightings I had came from patience, not pursuit, when we simply stopped poling and waited for a group of pelicans to drift into view on their own terms.
Nalsarovar sits roughly sixty kilometres from Ahmedabad, close enough for an early-morning run out and back if you leave in the dark. Many people do it as a half-day trip, and there is a small entry and boating fee at the sanctuary. I paired it with a lazy breakfast on the drive home and was back in the city well before noon. If you would rather not drive yourself before dawn, plenty of operators in Ahmedabad run tours that handle the timing and the boat for you, which takes the guesswork out of the early start.
Nalsarovar rewards the discomfort of an early alarm more than almost anywhere I have been near Ahmedabad. Get on the water before the sun is fully up, keep quiet, and let the wetland fill with pink and white wings around you. You do not need expensive gear or expert knowledge to be moved by it, just patience and a decent pair of binoculars. Go in winter, go at dawn, tread lightly, and this shallow silver lake will give you a morning you remember.
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