Author Archives: Virendra Mathur

Virendra Mathur considers himself a grateful and respectful immigrant on the soil of Turtle Island. He is a PhD candidate in the Department of Anthropology, with a collaborative specialization in Environmental Studies at the School of Environment at University of Toronto. He studies the Himalayan Langur – a species of monkey living amongst the tallest mountains in the world. His doctoral work focuses on understanding concepts of navigation and memory in this species within the framework of social ecology. He is writer and producer of a nature documentary titled “Himalayan Langur: Between Forest and Farm” that depicts his understanding of the movements and lifeways of these animals. He is a published author, having contributed academic and outward-facing pieces in journals and wildlife magazines

Following Primates

Each day weaves its own tale, and no two days unfold alike in the Mandal Valley. The Mandal Valley is like any central Himalayan valley, rich and teeming with small villages, its air soaked in the mystical scent of its culture and tradition. The landscape of the valley is a gradient of human agricultural activity merging into the surrounding forest. It is the southern entry point to the adjacent Kedarnath Wildlife Sanctuary (Srivastava et al., 2020). Every morning, the villagers in this valley would take up their daily chores. A script was followed. Cleaning up the cowshed and tending to the cows, walking to the forest to collect wood, dry grass, and fodder, heading to the village market or Gopeshwar, the nearest town, or working the agricultural fields. In Mandal valley, there were a handful of activities likely to happen as the day unfolded. And yet, every day would unfold (read more...)