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  Tours of Rajasthan :-
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Destinations of Rajasthan
 
· Alwar
· Bharatpur Tour
· Bikaner
· Deogarh
· Jaipur
· Jaisalmer
· Jodhpur
· Kota
· Mount - Abu
· Pushkar
· Ranthambore
· Sariska
· Shekhawati
· Udaipur
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Rajasthan > Wildlife of Rajasthan Travel Tour Package

 

 Ranthambore  »  Sariska  »  Bharatpur

 
 

Ranthambore

Ranthambore is one of the many famous destinations of the western state of India, Rajasthan. Generally a visit to Ranthambore means a visit to the tiger reserve here. However, the place has much more to offer you in sightseeing and excursions. Surrounded by the Vindhya and Aravali hill ranges and located very near to the outer fringes of the Thar Desert, Ranthambore offers you the best of the desert land as well as plain area near the hills. Due to its proximity to the Thar desert, the vegetation here is that of deciduous forest.
Ranthambore used to be the hunting ground of the Maharaja of Jaipur. Later it was declared as a game sanctuary in 1955. In 1980, it was declared as a national park and listed among the reserves protected under Project Tiger. Ranthambore is also considered to be the best place in the world to photograph the tiger in its natural habitat. In Ranthambore you can indulge in any of the adventurous activities that the park offers. A Jeep Safari, a cultural and traditional experience of the Meena tribes, a night out in the many hideouts in the park are some of the options you must not miss.

Sightseeing

There are many interesting spots for you to see in Ranthambore. The park is regarded as the most suitable place for wildlife photography in the world. Here you can capture the tiger in its various moods and moments. Besides the Ranthambore Park, there are places like the Ranthambore Fort (one of it’s kind in the entire state of Rajasthan), Jogi Mahal (the wonderful forest guest house) and the various species of flora and fauna which are also worth a look. While in Ranthambore you can also get the feel of local customs and traditions of the region. A Jeep safari followed by the dinner consisting of the region’s delicacies is an experience not to be missed.
 

 

Excursions

To have a good idea of the place and its past, an excursion to the nearby places of historical importance is a must. Apart from the historical witnesses of time, these places have much more to offer to make your visit a complete one. Sawai Madhopur village, which is the entry point to many of the nearby important destination is one of its kind. The village is known for its many historical monuments and related legends that you can find in these small and big structures. Karauli is another place famous for its temples and architectural marvels. Likewise, Bundi, Kota and Tonk are the three other important paces to visit during your excursion. The places assume importance because of their historical significance, many beautiful gardens, temples and the cross cultural influence present in these places due to various invasions and settling of a different communities here.

 

The park, which is one of the finest tiger reserves in the country is the main attraction of Ranthambore. Spread over an area of 392 sq. km the park is characterised by dry deciduous forests sprawling over the Aravalli and Vindhyan ranges. If you are fortunate enough you can also see the tiger strolling in the jungle or near any of the three lakes namely, the Padam Talab, Raj Bagh Talab and Milak Talab. The park also houses some of the rare species of desert creature like the sambhar, chital, nilgai, chinkara, langur, wild boar and peafowl. The park was one of the places visited by the former U.S. President Bill Clinton during his visit to India.

 

 

 

Ranthambore Fort

A visit to Ranthambore means a visit to the noteworthy Ranthambore fort too. The fort was built by the Chauhan rulers in the 10th century and is regarded as one of the oldest forts of Rajasthan. Due to its strategic location, the fort was ideal to keep the enemy at bay. The fort is also related to the historical legend of the royal women performing jauhar(self immolation) when the Muslim invader Ala-ud-din Khilji laid siege on this fort in 1303. The fort is characterised by temples, tanks, massive gates and huge walls.

 
 
Sariska  


Situated in the backdrop of the Aravali Hills, in the state of Rajasthan, Sariska National Park is a wonderfully quiet and peaceful destination to visit. The jungle here has been registered under the Project Tiger in 1979 and became a national park in 1982. A number of tourists visit this place due to its easy accessibility from the nearby major towns and cities. Sariska is especially famous for its tiger reserve though it also offers you sites to visit that have a strong historical background. The monuments at these places are symbolic of their glorious past. The park also offers the visitors a unique opportunity to observe the behavioural patterns of the animals residing here.

 

Sightseeing

Sariska is a storehouse of wild wonders. It houses some of the famous species of deciduous plants and wild animals. It also cradles some of the rare species of birds, both native and migratory. Moreover, the Kankawati Fort is one of the wonders of Sariska that stands alone and neglected. As if aware of the fact that the fort is abandoned, the jungle beasts especially the leopards come here for some outdoor hunting spree. It seems as if the buffaloes of the nearby villages that come here for grazing are the most mouth-watering delicacies for the visiting leopards.
 

Excursions

As if the flora and fauna along with the historical grandeur were not enough, Sariska also has a number of excursion destinations to visit around. The Siliserh lake and the palace which also make an ideal picnic point, the Hides that provide real life opportunity to play hide and seek with the wild and the major towns of Alwar and Deeg are some of the must visit excursions around Sariska. Moreover, all these excursion itineraries provide you with good eating and accommodation options to spend a day or two.

 

Park Flora and Fauna

Being located on the desert land of Rajasthan, the flora and fauna of Sariska is characterised by scrub-thorn arid forests, dry deciduous forests, rocks and scanty grasses spread over the hills and narrow valleys of the Aravali hill range. Due to the extreme characteristic of the climate here, Sariska houses a number of known and unknown species of desert flora and fauna. Due to scanty rainfall here the major plants of Sariska includes, dhok, khair, tendu, and ber. However, while talking about fauna here, the one specie that needs a mention is the tiger. The Sariska National park also houses varieties of panther, jungle cat, jackal, hyena, and fox. Besides these, the park is also the natural habitat of sambhar, chital, wild boar, hare, nilgai, civet, four-horned antelope, gaur (Indian bison) and porcupines. The park also nestles bird species like the peafowl, grey partridges, quails, sand grouses, tree pies, white-breasted kingfishers, golden-backed woodpeckers, crested serpent eagles, vultures and horned owls.

Bharatpur :-

Each year before the advent of winter in the northern hemisphere thousands of birds wing their way across the frozen waters of Siberia, Mongolia, Tibet and the high reaches of eastern Europe to the warmer subcontinent of India. One of the choicest destinations for these avians is the marsh of Bharatpur lying between the cities of Agra and Jaipur in the north-west. The protected marsh, woodland and scrub area of about 29 square kilometres is now known as the Keoladeo Ghana National Park. The sanctuary derived the first part of its name (Keoladeo) from a temple dedicated to Lord Shiva situated in the central zone of the park. The other part (Ghana) of the name is a Hindi word denoting dense and thick forests. The sanctuary was established by the Maharaja of Bharatpur in 1890 purely for the purpose of creating an exclusive royal game. A large area of the forests were enclosed with embankments and earthen dams called bunds. This led to the creation of a number of lakes and marshes and it proved godsend for the migratory birds from Siberia and other parts of the world. Poaching was banned by the government in 1965 and large-scale conservation efforts began by famous ornithologist Dr. Salim Ali led the sanctuary to be declared as a National Park in March 1982. The sanctuary was accepted as a World Heritage Site by UNESCO in 1985.

Sightseeing

The Keoladeo Ghana National Park is home to an astonishing range of flora and fauna. Birds come to this national park in waves. From August through November, it is indigenous water birds. In early October the first migrants arrive from the high plateaux of Central Asia, Mongolia and Siberia, the most eagerly awaited of the lot being the gravely threatened Siberian crane. The month of March sees most of these migrants leave the national park. But animals that have made it their home—the nilgai (blue bull), sambar, jungle cat and mongoose—spend the entire summer here. A bike or rickshaw ride through the length and breath of this sanctuary is an unforgettable experience. Most parts of the sanctuary can be reached by using bicycles or rickshaws that can be hired from the office of wildlife authorities situated at the main gate. Binoculars and English-speaking trained guides can also be hired to increase your chances of sighting a Siberian crane, the most famous of its migratory guests.

Excursions

While on a trip to Bharatpur, do take some time off to visit the nearby places like Alwar, Deeg, Mahaban, Barsana, Dholpur, and Nandgaon which are quite popular among tourists. The Bharatpur-Deeg-Dholpur circuit covers many small and seemingly backward villages that have enjoyed celebrity status once upon a time, playing host to royalty or bearing witness to major battles. Mahwa is a halfway house between Bharatpur and Jaipur at a distance of around 60 km on National Highway 11. Alwar is regarded as the gateway to the colourful state of Rajasthan. Deeg is a princely town which was once used as the summer resort by Maharaja of Bharatpur. The small but famous pilgrimage centre, Govardhan, lies along the narrow spur of hills east of Deeg. South-east of Bharatpur, on the national highway between Agra and Gwalior, lies Dholpur, capital of the former princely state of the same name. Mahaban, Nandgaon, Barsana, and Baldeo are all villages related to childhood stories of Lord Krishna.

JUNGLE WALK

With almost 377 bird species already spotted at Bharatpur, the place is certainly one of the most inviting bird sanctuaries in the world. You can easily spot between 50 to 100 species in a single day, and if your luck permits, you may even come across a Siberian crane in the winter. In fact, Bharatpur’s primary claim to fame is that it is one of the only two known wintering haunts of the western race of the rare and graceful Siberian crane.

Of course, the birds you see will naturally depend on the habitat you are in—and Bharatpur has a variety. The marshy wetlands of the Hansarovar or Mansarovar or Ramband, for instance, are areas where the migratory waterfowl congregate in their thousands. Both the grey lag and the bar-headed geese can be found here, often together. The former is somewhat dowdy in its pepper browns and has a pink bill and legs; the latter is smartly turned out in silver-grey, black and white, has an ochre bill and legs, as well as three charcoal //’caste//’ marks across its head. Ducks come in quite a selection: raffish, auburn-headed red-crested pochards wearing black polo necks and vermilion lipstick; more conservatively clad-white-eyed pochards in black Nehru jackets; beady-eyed shovellers (Anas clypeata) floating low and mean, cleaving the water with their patent-leather bills; common teals hiding behind silky green masks; pintails, in chocolate and silver, and mallards with thousand-carat emerald heads.

Of the resident ducks, the cotton teal float demurely around in their simple canvas-like outfits, while the mahogany and honey teals enliven the proceedings with lovely disyllabic whistles as they fly around in disorganized sorties.

Here too stride the waders—some tall enough to pace though the marshes, others light enough to tiptoe over the floating vegetation. The lovely Siberian cranes are of course, the cause celebre of this lot. Equally elegant are the stately grey sarus cranes, a pair often accompanied by a chick who keeps between its parents. There are spoonbills doing their minesweeping act, white ibis looking hunched and rather craven, cattle egrets that take off like blizzards, 250-strong; and everywhere, squeaking, scattering sandpipers and redshanks, all so confusingly dappled and blotched as they explode from cover and zing away.

The splay-footed purple moorhen look like overweight matrons clad in purple silk, the elegant bronze-winged jacanas show off their metallic tints and the khaki white-tailed lapwings stand tall and upright on reedy yellow legs. A pair of black-necked storks may patrol the middle distances of the marshes, careful to keep apart and, suddenly, a large squadron of common cranes may appear overhead, calling evocatively as they circle and land.

And then, the dangerous shadow of the marsh harrier or fishing eagle passes over this contented congregation. There is a sudden heart-stopping roar of wings over water as some 5,000 ducks take to the sky in tumultuous take-off, the panic spreading though the marsh like a wildlife in a scrub jungle. The birds swarm and circle agitatedly and then splash down to a landing once more. You can easily spend the day at the edge of these marshes watching the goings on.

The trees (mainly acacias) that shroud the bunds you walk along also teem with birdlife. Small minivets, in lava, ash and charcoal flicker amidst the greenery, bejewelled kingfishers flash off their perches like short-circuits; red-breasted and grey-headed flycatchers regard you out of round, innocent eyes—the former brown with a flush of orange on its breast (only the male has this), the latter deadly in sulphur and gunpowder. The shrikes eye you suspiciously, their black eyes glittering behind their executioner masks. And a host of dapper wire-tailed swallows may keep you entranced as they dodge deftly between the trees in some hectic game of chase.

The sandy, stony tracts around Python Point, near the Hansarovar, may seem devoid of birdlife except for the odd disgruntled bulbul but the thickets here are the haunts of munias and warblers, and pipits and larks that saunter about on the sand.

The shady woodland areas where the peepuls and kadams soar high and wide, like the lovely stretch along the park//’s eastern boundary wall, are the haunts of shikras (sparrow hawks), tree-creepers, nuthatches and woodpeckers, to mention a few. Another marvelous spot is Kadam Kunj, where an ancient, crumbling hunting lodge squats, surrounded by a moat of black water and crowned by enormous peepul trees, from where the wheezy whistling of green pigeons is interspersed by the crashing, flapping sounds of clumsy nesting vultures.

And wherever you are, it pays to look carefully at the numerous dead trees that dot the landscape for they make favorite perches for many: majestic serpent eagle that use them as vantage points; owls that may peer out of the hollows, their eyes huge and golden; Stealth-bomber-like darters and witch-black cormorants holding their wings out to dry; herons waiting in ambush, and even amorous brahminy mynas! It is also sensible to look up every now and then and see what the sky has to offer.

Even the highly //’populated//’ areas of the park have their share of birds. At the site of the Keoladeo temple, for instance, white wagtails strut about pompous as landlords amongst the visitors; the blue-throats and redstarts are more circumspect. White-breasted water hens stride officiously from litter bin to litter bin and the jungle babbler will snatch the chips from your hands and then jeer at you rudely.

In this avian kingdom, mammals have also made their home to provide necessary ecological balance. The areas near the Forest Lodge and Forest Resthouse are favorite haunts of jackals and sounders of grunting wild boar. Spotted deer, sambar and nilgai splash about in the marshes, and if you are lucky you may catch a glimpse of that prince ling amongst antelopes: the blackbuck. Less visible are fishing cats and monitors. If you are both very quiet and lucky, you may catch sight of the massive gleaming pythons, sunning themselves at Python Point beyond Keoladeo Temple: they are quick to glide underground though, and very sensitive to footfalls and voices. And if snakes are there, can the mongoose be far behind? Well, the nemesis mongoose is also seen here in quite an appreciable number.

 
 
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