Wathai’s jaali kamra (a netted sit-out) — where you can hang out to gossip, read, watch the seasons turn — is cheery, with a smattering of white cane chairs and panoramic views of the tea bushes leaning deep into the horizon. I spend a lively hour over tea and snacks with Delhi-based conservationist Seema Dutta, just back from Wakhro, and a friend from Dibrugarh in the drawing room infused with aquatic blues and sea green. The plump sofa is matched with spacious armchairs. A small TV beckons from bookshelves surprisingly free of books. In winter, the blaze from the fireplace warms the room, making a cozy hideaway to drink up a book or a cup of hot chocolate. Here, as all over the bungalow, there are some fine prints of avifauna. Indeed, all three bedrooms get their names from birds — Sibia, Yuhina and Minla.