The sanctuary is located within a plantation forest of teak and mahogany, interspersed with wild deciduous trees. At dawn, our birding guide Jijo Mathew, all of twenty-seven, leads us on a walk through the forest to a rocky outcrop. There is a dense thicket of bushes in the foreground and tall trees in the background. Jijo points out that the area is at a boundary of several habitats, so we wait for the birds to emerge. And emerge they do. Almost immediately we spot plum-headed parakeets in the bush. The new sun glancing off their improbably colourful heads, they look like plums ready to be plucked. A bevy of racket-tailed drongos do a noisy fly-by and arrange themselves in a high and dry branch in a spectacular pageantry of showy tails. A grey jungle fowl female, ordinarily shy, is very close to us pecking away at the ground. The bright red crest of a black-rumped flameback cuts a sharp contrast against a drab tree trunk. And then the endemic species start to show. The rufous treepie we had been watching for a while is completely upstaged by the graceful sweep of a white-bellied treepie, endemic to the Western Ghats. With a white undershirt chest and a flowing tail it poses in a nearby branch, catching the early light just so. A shrill cackle pulls us away to yet another endemic a Malabar grey hornbill has landed in a tree not ten feet away. It does a characteristic half-shrug and methodically swivels its head scanning the bark for bugs. Bugs are tracked down and eaten, and the unwieldy beak is meticulously scraped clean on the bark. Chattering droves of Malabar parakeets show up in luxuriant strokes from a brilliant blue-grey palette. On a high branch directly above our heads is a blue-bearded bee-eater, a near endemic, with its beard iridescent in the morning light.