| Location
of Kanha National Park: |
Mandla
District, Madhya Pradesh, India |
| Area covered: |
1940 sq. km. |
| Main Wildlife
Found in Kanha National Park: |
Tiger,
Leopard, Bear |
| Best time to
visi Kanha National Parkt: |
November
to June (The park remains closed
from July to October) |
The
Royal Bardia National Park is the largest
and most undisturbed wild area of the
Terai region of the Nepal Himalayas.
Similar to Chitwan Park, but with a
drier climate and a more remote location,
Bardia encompasses 1,000-sq-kms of riverine
grassland and sal forests.
The Terai or lowland
hills and valleys of southern Nepal,
nowhere over 1,000 feet in elevation,
extend all along the Indian border.
The Terai once supported a healthy wildlife
population in a habitat of 25-foot high
elephant grass and dense hardwood forests,
but had very few people, due to virulent
malarial mosquitos.
Bardia was a royal
hunting reserve of Nepal's Rana rulers
from 1846 to 1950. In Nepal, wildlife
lost whatever protection the royal hunting
reserve conveyed when the Rana rule
ended in the 1950's. A well-meaning
malaria eradication program in the 1950's
and 1960's opened the terai for settlement,
and transformed about 75% of the native
Terai to agricultural land. Wildlife
populations declined with the combination
of increased settlement and widespread
poaching. Bardia was declared a wildlife
reserve in 1976, first measuring 134
sq miles and expanded in 1985 to 374
sq miles.
Natural Beauty of Bardia National
Park
Today's Royal Bardia
National Park is bordered to the south
by the Babai River, to the north by
the Shiwalik or Churia Hills, to the
west by the Girwa River (a tributary
of the Karnali), and to the east by
a section of the East-West Highway which
bisects the park. The Terai is only
in the southwest corner of the park.
Much of Bardia is on the southern slopes
of the Shiwalik Range where the hills
rise to over 4,000 feet.
From the base of these
hills, the park slopes gently over highly
porous ground for several miles to the
rivers of the Gangetic plain. At Chisopani
Gorge, the swift-flowing Karnali River
emerges from the Shiwalik Range onto
the broad plain and flows purposefully
through the semi-tropical jungle. Where
the river braids out, small riverine
forested islands form. Wildlife frequent
these oases - maybe you'll be as lucky
as we once were to spot a wild Elephant
swimming trunk-deep across the river
to reach the island.
Fuana In Bardia
National Park
What
makes a visit to Nepal's Royal Bardia
National Park particularly special is
not just its large and intact habitat
area and its isolated location, but
also the presence here of one of the
last known herds of wild Elephants in
South Asia. The herd, numbering less
than two dozen, roams these remote jungles
in western Nepal.
The largest of the
herd is affectionately called “Thulo
Hati”, which means "Big Elephant"
in the Nepali language. Seeing these
wild Elephants greyish-white bulk rising
above the morning mists and hearing
them trumpet across the jungle clearing
is one of the most remarkable wildlife
experiences to be had on our planet.
Bardia
also boasts the greatest number of deer
species in Nepal. The six deer species
found in the park are: Chital or spotted
Deer with its ubiquitous white spots
on a brown coat; Hog Deer; similar to
but smaller than Chital; Sambhar, the
largest Deer on Indian subcontinent
with a shaggy coat and thick antlers;
Swamp Deer; Barasingha; and reddish-colored
Barking Deer, the park's smallest Deer.
Other large mammals
are: Gaur, the largest wild oxen in
world; wild Boar, an omnivorous black-coated
creature with large tusks; the agile
sloth Bear, a shaggy black bear with
a distinctive white "V" on
its chest; Blue Bull or Nilgai, the
largest Antelope on the Indian subcontinent;
and Himalayan Tahr. Serow and Goral,
two goat-Antelope members, are also
found. Small mammals include: Langur
Monkey, Rhesus Macaque, Jackal, three
species of cats (jungle, leopard, and
fishing); yellow-throated Marten; Mongoose;
and Indian Otter.
Two species of crocodiles
swim in the Karnali, Girwa, and Babai
Rivers - the blunt-snouted Marsh Mugger
and the fish-eating gharial with its
long thin snout. These creatures share
the water with the fresh-water Gangetic
Dolphin. The Karnali also supports the
great mahseer, which weigh up to 90
lbs, an angler's prize catch.
Birds are the park's
most conspicuous fauna with over 300
resident and migratory species. Avid
bird-watchers will want to visit the
park in November or from February to
April when migrants arrive, depart or
pass through.
Jungle Safari In Bardia
National Park
To view the wild Elephants,
you ride on the backs of specially-trained
elephants, each guided by a driver.
As you sit in a padded wooden platform
on the Elephant's back with your camera
ready, your Mahout steers the Elephant
through tall grass. Mists rise off the
nearby river, and you spot a mother
Rhino leading her baby down to the river
for a drink. Monkeys chatter and birds
call in the nearby trees, signaling
that an elusive Royal Bengal Tiger is
stalking Deer through the high grass.
It's a very special experience - a unique
experience out at Royal Bardia - unlike
any other wildlife setting in Nepal.
How To Get There:
Air & Road: To reach Bardia, take
the daily air flight or public bus from
Kathmandu to napalgunj, from where it
is a five hour drive to the park office
at Thakurdwara. This nature sanctuary
is best visit from October to April.
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