The first few minutes into the Jabarkhet Nature Reserve take some getting used to. After all, you are still so close to civilisation; as the crow flies, you can see Landour's famous landmark - the TV tower - less than 100 metre away. The next instant, you are gawking at the photo of a grown male leopard - standing at the exact same place you are - who was there just 10 hours ago! The photo is a snapshot from one of the eight camera traps that have been installed at the 110-acre forest off Dhanolti Road, Mussoorie. The cameras have captured pictures of barking deer, goral, yellow-throated martens, leopard cat, langur, black bear, and porcupine too.
"Not too long ago, one of our cameras also spotted a sambar, the handsome horned deer that is not even a part of the wildlife here," says Virendra Panwar, the 21-year-old nature guide of the reserve. The deer must have ventured uphill from the plains, he explains, and gone back after sometime. The incident is of significant value because it is an indication that the reserve is being accepted by the wildlife as a forest they are safe in. Other attractions include over 100 species of birds, over 300 varieties of flowers and 60 species of mushrooms and fungi. The forest itself is a mixed one and includes oak, rhododendron, chestnut, walnut, deodar, pine, and several varieties of shrubs and herbs.
While the reserve offers a dip into serenity for visitors, for Worah and her team, it is a chance to showcase what positive human intervention can do. "We wanted to showcase how tourism can also mean conserving nature. Hopefully, we will become a model for the state," she says.