I was a budding herpetologist, just back to my home in India from a college-army-job stint in the US. The year was 1968 and Bombay (now Mumbai) was a bustling metropolis that was difficult to take for too long. I made a pilgrimage to the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS) and there I had the pleasure of meeting a group of people who would have a strong influence on my life, including a tall man with a hawk nose and an aura of humorous intelligence. This was Zafar Futehally, then the Honorary Secretary of the Society and soon to be the man who started India&rsquos branch of the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF). Zafar seemed to know just about everyone who was involved with wildlife studies, bird-watching and environmental matters. This was a time in India&rsquos young history as an independent nation when the word conservation was only just beginning to be heard, and it was largely due to Zafar&rsquos passion and energy that it became a buzzword, and the pursuit and goal of many of us neophytes. My own interest was reptiles, and this devoted bird man was fully supportive &mdash the Madras Snake Park was started with an initial grant from WWF, thanks, of course, to Zafar at WWF-India and his daughter Shama.