On a routine drive through Bengaluru, Ishan Shanavas has spotted barn owls gliding between trees. From his balcony, he has watched a shikra hunt a tailorbird. Growing up, he fell asleep listening to a white-cheeked barbet nesting outside his home. None of these encounters required a national park or a remote forest. They unfolded within the rhythms of everyday life. At twenty-two, Shanavas has built his work around this idea. Wildlife, he believes, is not distant or exotic. It is present, often unnoticed, in the spaces people already inhabit. A single aim shapes his work as a writer, educator and founder of Eco Inspire: helping people, especially young people, learn how to look.





