Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Off the beaten track for leopard or dragonfly

Having carved out a career from his passion for wildlife, Riaz Cader is expanding his travel portfolio

- By Yomal Senerath-Yapa

Growing up, Riaz Cader loved nothing better than an escape into the remote rural wilderness; whether it be the dry zone wildlife bungalows of Mahasilawa or Thalgasman­kade in Yala with leopard and bear at a waterhole; the fecund darkness of a rain forest with endemic frog and loris and lizard; or to dream of the dry Indian scrub where the tiger hunts and dhole calls out.

Today at 37, Riaz is content having carved out of his passion for wildlife a career as a nature tourism profession­al, with his own company, Natural World Explorer, curating special safaris with many itinerarie­s focusing diversely on butterflie­s, birds, wild cats and even dragonflie­s; while also being a local ‘ground handler’ for big documentar­ies by the big names including National Geographic, BBC and Animal Planet.

Always ‘grabbing at any excuse’ to escape to the wild, Riaz has accumulate­d a massive portfolio of wildlife snaps that would be the envy of any shutterbug.

Educated at Royal College, then the Elizabeth Moir School, when he watched TV it was mostly documentar­ies as an escape chute into wild places, he says.

After completing his Bachelor of Commerce at the Melbourne University he was crammed into an office Down Under till he gave it up and took a serendipit­ous flight home to Sri Lanka, then just finding its feet after the war. While waiting to secure a position in the financial sector he signed up for an internship at Jetwing Eco Holidays, training under Gehan de Silva Wijeratne and what was meant to be a short tenure, became full time work.

After setting up on his own with Natural World Explorer with wife Nidaal, Riaz has had moments that probably even Jane Goodall (or a BBC or Discovery film crew) would envy.

Working for big documentar­ies across the length and breadth of the island involves staying on location in the wild for weeks and among some of the most epic experience­s he says was seeing ‘super pods’ of sperm whales--giant conglomera­tes (going up incredibly to 80 individual­s) frolicking in the Indian Ocean.

There was also capturing off Mirissa pics of a couple of killer whales up close, and getting ‘honeymoon shots’ of two romancing leopards on the Moderagala Rock in Yala.

While always avid for the majestic leopard or the fierce bear the lesser felines have not been ignored. Some intimate shots of a brood of fishing cats in the

Thalangama wetlands he says, goes to show “you don’t always have to go far or spend big to take photograph­s.”

Recently he had a rendezvous with a portly saltwater crocodile in a canal in Colombo and took a curious snap of a smart Shikra defending its substantia­l kill of a rat from some sleek crows – in his own driveway in Kollupitiy­a.

With ground handling for documentar­ies it is not all glamour and sightings of rare animal behaviour every day; it is “a lot of hours in the field, a lot of fact finding, a lot of fine tuning, running along from location to location, making contingenc­y backup plans and so on.”

While till recently they mostly worked with tourists from overseas and film crews, now they are preparing to cater to Lankans looking for wildlife holidays within our shores as well as in India and Africa with their expertise. While the dry zone figures large in their itinerarie­s, they embrace all terrains and any traveller with Natural World Explorer gets the full experience down to spotting rare butterflie­s and minuscule dragonflie­s- “a little different to what you would normally see,” says Riaz. They take pride in their teams including seasoned naturalist­s, jeep drivers and trackers.

While affirming there can be no such thing as a ‘perfect’ snapshot, Riaz says a good picture is an alchemy which involves practice and years of rehearsing for the moment.

While also a sports fan, Riaz remains glad his ‘main hobby’- wildlife photograph­y – makes an impact on those people otherwise not sensitive to nature adding that he hopes his nature images can slowly bring these people into the fold of conservati­onists.

 ?? ?? Taking a stand: A shikra defends its prey from persistent crows in the heart of the city and right a selection of Riaz’s wildlife shots
Taking a stand: A shikra defends its prey from persistent crows in the heart of the city and right a selection of Riaz’s wildlife shots
 ?? ?? Riaz Cader
Riaz Cader
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 ?? ?? A Rhino-horned lizard in Horton Plains and on our Magazine cover, Mannar
A Rhino-horned lizard in Horton Plains and on our Magazine cover, Mannar
 ?? ?? Storming the fences: An elephant goes for the garbage dump at Minneriya
Storming the fences: An elephant goes for the garbage dump at Minneriya

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