Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Indian. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 6, 2016

Malana Village & Ellora cave temple


Malana Village, Himachal Pradesh

#india #bharat #hindustan #nature #tourism#himachal #malana #village
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Ellora cave temple is located in Aurangabad district of Maharashtra. It is famous throughout the world for prehistoric temples, portraying the rich traditions of India and the excellent work of art.

Friday, December 18, 2015

Satyr Tragopan (Tragopan Satyra)


The Satyr Tragopan is a rare resident pheasant which occurs at high elevations in the Himalaya. Male Satyr's are 68cm and are a bright crimson red with white spots. Females are smaller and less conspicuous.
Tragopans are often called “horned pheasants” because they display horn-like projections during courtship. They have an Asian distribution and belong to the Pheasant family, Phasianidae. 4 out of the 5 known species occur in India.
Image: Satyr Tragopan male
Photographer: James Ownby
‪#‎india‬ ‪#‎bharat‬ ‪#‎himalayas‬ ‪#‎indianbirds‬ ‪#‎birds‬ ‪#‎hindustan‬ ‪#‎satyrtragopan‬

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Dawki Meghalaya


Dawki is the beautiful town in Jaintia Hills of Meghalaya and a road border crossings between India and Bangladesh. The freely flowing Dawki or Umngot river in Shillong offers one of the most beautiful view of the city and the venue of the annual boat race held in March. The Umngot river also has a bridge known as Dawki Bridge, a suspension bridge over the river build by Britishers.

Friday, August 21, 2015

Indira Sagar Dam


Indira sagar dam built on the Narmada river with a height of 92m. is concrete gravity dam, located in Khandwa district of Madhya Pradesh. Indira sagar project was the key project on Narmada river providing excellent storage site of water. Indira Sagar Dam has the biggest reservoir in India.
Height: 92 m
Length: 653 m
Type: Concrete Gravity Dam
River: Narmada River
Location: Madhya Pradesh
Installed capacity: 1,000 MW

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Jammu


One of the most visited destinations in North India, Jammu is a beautiful city dotted with a number of tourist attractions including temples. While the architectural beauty of the temples leaves you mesmerized, the scenic beauty and pleasing ambiance of the city is not less, it makes you visit again and again. Jammu is best known for housing Vaishno Devi, which is one of the most sacred sites of the Hindus. When it comes to tourist attractions in Jammu, temples dominate the destination Jammu. Apart from the popular shrine of Vaishno Devi, Raghunath Mandir, Bawey Wali Mata Temple, Ranbireshwar Temple, Mahamaya Temple, Peer Kho Cave Temple and Panchbakhtar Temple are popular shrines in Jammu.
Jammu is also popular for housing a number of historical structures like Mubarak Mandi Palace, Bahu Fort and Amar Mahal Palace. These structures showcase different architectural styles such as European, Mughal and Rajasthani. To sum up, Jammu is a great destination if you wish to explore the religious and scenic side of India. ‪#‎india‬ ‪#‎jammu‬‪#‎tourism‬ ‪#‎destination‬ ‪#‎nature‬ ‪#‎history‬

Saturday, August 1, 2015

Art Gallery - Nature Morte

The staple of contemporary Indian art scene, the gallery Nature Morte was originally opened in 1982 in New York and revived 15 years later in New Delhi by Peter Nagy, a gallery owner and an artist himself. Nowadays, the gallery is based in a multi-level space in central-south Delhi. The gallery showcases a variety of contemporary art forms, with special focus on conceptual art, installations, Pop Art and photographs. The gallery represents a number of well-known and established contemporary Indian artists such as a multimedia artist Jitish Kallat and installation artist Anita Dube.

Wednesday, July 29, 2015

Famous Beaches in Kerala (Part 2)

Cherai Beach is on the western coast of Vypin Island ,25 km from Kochi. Goshree bridges connect the island to the mainland. There are regular ferry services also connecting the two areas . Cherai beach is the longest compared to two other beaches in the island.
Sankumugham Beach is located very close to Trivandrum City. It is one of the evening hideouts for the city dwellers to unwind and relax.
Calicut Beach is another beach that is located close to the city center. I have never seen any other beach where these many ice creams shops operate close-by. I am not talking about the ice cream carts but actual shops.
Kappad Beach is a historically important beach in Kerala. It is the place where Vasco da Gama, the Portuguese explorer landed in 1498. It is 12 kms away from Calicut city and has beautiful sandy beach stretches.
Well, there are many more beaches as Kerala is a coastal state. Depending on where you are traveling in Kerala, you can ask your Kerala tour operator to guide you to the one near that location. ‪#‎India‬ ‪#‎Kerela‬‪#‎Beach‬ ‪#‎tourism‬

Famous Beaches in Kerala (Part 1)

Being a coastline State Kerala has a long western border with Arabian Sea. There are beaches of all types :- wet and wild hilly shores, long promenades, beaches adjoining backwaters and the sea . Take your choice.
Bekal Beach in the northern most part of Kerala Kasargod is a long lovely one. The Bekal Fort in the middle makes it enchanting. View the sea from the ramparts of the fort, or walk, swim, or picnic. The place is a declared tourism spot, so all amenities are provided such as accommodation for all pockets, good roads, clean beach etc. It lies at a distance of 16 km from the town of Kasargod.
Muzhuppilangad Beach is 5 km north of Thalassery. (15 km from Kannur ) An unpaved road winding through coconut groves lead you to the beach. The 5 km long beach curves in a wide expanse: you can even see the Kannur beach to the north. About 200 meters away is the Green Island. But the Prize goes to the 5 acre Dharmadam Island in beauty. During low tide you can walk to the island if you get permission from the owners. The rocky shores are remarkably beautiful.
Kovalam Beach is the most well-known beach in India. The bay created by the jutting promontory is calm and ideal for bathing. The place has everything you need, comfy cottages, high-end hotels, pools, yoga center, places where you can have soothing medicinal oil baths. It is only 12 km from Trivandrum City.
Varkala Beach also known as Papanasam (washing away sins) Beach is unique for the presence of cliffs a strange sight on the flat coast. As the waves dash against them, water spouts and spas are formed. One can bathe and swim also at the beach. There are many shops around to have snacks. The town of Varkala is about 32 miles north-west of Trivandrum.‪#‎India‬ ‪#‎Kerela‬ ‪#‎Beach‬ ‪#‎tourism‬

Saturday, July 25, 2015

Netarhat


A plateau, four miles long and two and a half miles broad. It is in the extreme of the district, the highest point of which is 3,800 feet above the sea level. It is in Mahuadanr police station and is 96 miles west of Ranchi across seven hills. This is the highest point on the plateau of Chhotanagpur. Netarhat is a place of peculiar charm which has a laid its spell on many casual visitors. The stillness of the jungle and the cool and refreshing air brings relief from the dust and heat of the plains.The sight of the sunrise near the Palamu dak bungalow and sunset at Mangolia point about six miles from the Public school. It is advisable that tourist must see the SUNRISE and SUNSET in Neterhat. Presently Neterhat is situated in new created district LATEHAR from PALAMU.

Netarhat has a wonderful climate and in the July and August it does not become moist. In summer Netarhat has a very cool climate. The
  plateau is : ringed by forest and the rainfall usually does not exceed 60 inches per year. There are patches of pines and cypresses grown by
  the Forest. Department and both the species have taken to the soil  very kindly. Apples and peaches are grown but the fruits are not very big.
  English vegetables could easily be grown. The place has now been freed from malaria. There are a number of flowering trees particularly of
  Bauhinia and Cassia species. Season flowers could be grown throughout the year. It has been held the flowering trees of different species
  could be very well grown on the plateau which will ensure a feast of flowers throughout  the year.
  

  
The development of Netarhat will open the neighbouring  Chhechhari valley and other hill tops such as Jamirapat (3,747 feet above sea level
  ) and Gulgupat (3,819 feet above sea level ). Jharkhand’s second highest fall, the Burhaghagh with a sheer drops of 466 feet is also near
  Netarhat but at present accessible only to the hiker. Netarhat offers plenty of big game shooting with permission from the Forest Department.
  Tigers are common in certain sections. With the development of Netarhat which has been taken up, it will have great attraction to the general
  tourists, hiker, shikari and anthropologists. There is one important beauty  spot in Netarhat. 

Sunday, July 19, 2015

Indian Flying Fox

Habitat: This species roosts in large colonies of hundreds to thousands of individuals on large trees in rural and urban areas, close to agricultural fields, ponds and by the side of roads It feeds on a wide variety of fruits and flowers, both wild and cultivated. A single young is born between April to early June. It travels long distances, up to 150 km to and from its roost, a night in search of fleshy berries.
National Parks: Point Calimere Wildlife Sanctuary in Tamil Nadu, Palamau Tiger Reserve and Hazaribagh Wildlife Sanctuary in Jharkhand, Kawal Wildlife Sanctuary in Andhra Pradesh, Molem National Park in Goa, Kanha National Park in Madhya Pradesh, Chilka (Nalaban) Wildlife Sanctuary in Orissa and Indravati National Park in Chattisgarh.
Status in the Wild: Least concern
More Facts At: The IUCN Red List of Threatened Specieshttp://www.iucnredlist.org/apps/redlist/details/18725/0

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Madhubani Paintings


Madhubani Paintings - Mithila painting, as a domestic ritual activity, was unknown to the outside world until the massive Bihar earthquake of 1934. House walls had tumbled down, and the British colonial officer in Madhubani District, William G. Archer, inspecting the damage "discovered" the paintings on the newly exposed interior walls of homes. Archer - later to become the South Asia Curator at London's Victoria and Albert Museum - was stunned by the beauty of the paintings and similarities to the work of modern Western artists like Klee, Miro, and Picasso. During the 1930s he took black and white photos of some of these paintings, the earliest images we have of them. Then in a 1949 article in the Indian art journal, Marg, he brought the wall paintings to public attention. Then a second natural disaster, a severe draught in the late 1960s, prompted the All India Handicrafts Board to encourage a few upper caste women in villages around Madhubani town to transfer their ritual wall paintings to paper as an income generating project. Drawing on the region's rich visual culture, contrasting "line painting" and "color painting" traditions, and their individual talents, several of these women turned out to be superb artists. Four of them were soon representing India in cultural fairs in Europe, Russia, and the USA. Their national and international recognition prompted many other women from many other castes - including harijans or dalits, the ex-"untouchables" - to begin painting on paper as well.

By the late 1970s, the popular success of the paintings - aesthetically distinct from other Indian painting traditions - was drawing dealers from New Delhi offering minimal prices for mass produced paintings of the most popular divinities and three familiar scenes from the Ramayana. Out of poverty, many painters complied with the dealers' demands, and produced the rapid and repetitious images known as "Madhubani paintings." Nevertheless, with the encouragement of a number of outsiders - both Indian and foreign - other artists working within the same aesthetic traditions continued to produce the highly crafted, deeply individual and increasingly diverse work, now known as "Mithila Painting."

Mithila had long been famous in India for its rich culture and numerous poets, scholars, and theologians - all men. For women, it has been a deeply conservative society, and until painting on paper began 40+ years ago, most women were confined to their homes and limited to household chores, child rearing, managing family rituals, and ritual wall painting.

Painting on paper for sale has changed this dramatically. Aside from generating important new family income, individual women have gained local, national, and even international recognition. Artists are being invited to exhibitions across India, and to Europe, the United States, and Japan - no longer as "folk artists," but now as "contemporary artists." Where once their paintings were "anonymous," now they are proudly signed. Along with economic success, opportunities for travel, education, radio, and now television are expanding women's consciousness and engagement with the multiple worlds around them. Gender relations are shifting. A few men continue to paint within what is still defined as "a women's tradition," but their work tends to be personal and anodyne. In contrast, the women's paintings are increasingly socially charged, critical, and edgy.

These changes have provoked an argument in Mithila and beyond between cultural conservatives who claim that commercialization and the loss of its ritual functions has debased Mithila painting, versus those who see Mithila Painting as a contemporary art form rooted in the expanding experience, concerns, and freedoms of Mithila's women. Viewers of Mithila Painting: The Evolution of an Art Form are encouraged to form their own judgments. #art #india #madhubani #indianart #paintings

Tuesday, July 7, 2015

Unexplored India # 02



*) - The biodiversity hotspot regions of India are one of the richest in the world in terms of endemic species of mammals, birds and reptiles. The Western Ghats, Eastern Himalayas and North-Eastern India region are home to a wide ranges of flora and fauna, including the well-known large mammals Asian Elephant, Bengal Tiger, Asiatic Lion, Leopard, Sloth Bear and greater one-horned rhinoceros.


*) - The two Indian union territories Lakshadweep and the Andaman and Nicobar Islands are major sea island,located in the Arabian sea and the Bay of Bengal. Lakshadweep has 36 islands and islets and Andaman Islands consists of 204 small islands, which are now a days one of the major tourist destinations in India.

Sunday, July 5, 2015

Nature Refuge


Manas Wildlife Sanctuary
Located in Assam, the Manas Wildlife Sanctuary was established in 1985 and is located in the foothills of the Himalayas. The sanctuary is a home to a plethora of rare and endangered species of animals like Tiger, Asian elephants, Golden Cat, Leopards, Clouded Leopard, Slow Loris and Chital etc. ‪#‎india‬ ‪#‎bharat‬ ‪#‎archives‬ ‪#‎indian‬ ‪#‎wildlife‬ ‪#‎nature‬ 



Jim Corbett National Park
Located in the Nainital District of Uttrakhand, Jim Corbett National Park was established in 1936. The national park is located amidst a mixed terrain of deciduous forests and mountainous pine forests. As a result Jim Corbett National park is one of the most biologically diverse zones in India. Corbett National Park is a home to the Bengal tiger, Leopard, Leopard cat, Elephants, Sambhar Deer and Golden Jackal etc.

Saturday, July 4, 2015

Black Buck and Nilgiri Langur #India

India is still home to some of the most beautiful creatures in the world, There are 400 wildlife sanctuaries and 80 National parks in India, which give shelter to the wide range of wild and Endangered Wild Animal. Because of deforestation and other human activity wild animals lost their habitat and reached at risk of become extinct. Indian is losing their animals due to Environmental pollution, deforestation,loss of habitat, human interference, poaching and hunting. All animals and birds in India are rated as critically Endangered (CR), Endangered (EN) or Vulnerable (VU). Mainly endangered animals in India are big cats family includes snow leopard, Bengal tiger and Asiatic Lion, other India’s endangered animals are Purple Frog or Pig nose Frog,Great Indian Vulture,Indian giant squirrel,Giant Indian Fruit Bat,Great birds and King Kobra. Some of the extinct animals of India includes Asiatic cheetah,Pink headed duck and Indian aurochs. Couple of endangered animal are Black Buck and Nilgiri Langur.


Black buck also known as Kala Hiran is a species of antelope found mainly in India. It is one of the most beautiful and graceful animals of antelope species in India. Due to extensive poaching and habitat loss, black buck populations have been reduced drastically. The Antelopes of India can be seen in a a few protected areas like the Guindy National park Tamil Nadu, Rollapadu Andhra Pradesh and Chilka (Orissa) other than few parts of Rajasthan and Haryana, Punjab is declared Black buck as state animal.

The Nilgiri Langur found in the Nilgiri Hills of the Western Ghats in South India. Its range also includes Kodagu in Karnataka, Palani Hills in Tamil Nadu and many other hilly areas in Kerala. The Nilgiri Black Langur is a member of one of the 13 species of monkeys found in India,which is endangered due to deforestation and poaching for its fur and flesh. Indian golden langur is also falls in the same category of endangered animals of India. 

Thursday, July 2, 2015

Hemis High Altitude National Park

Also known as Hemis High Altitude National Park, it is the largest national park in India with an area that spans across 4,400 sq kilometers. Interestingly the park also contains several Tibetan-Buddhist gompas and monasteries and is visited by several tourists. The Hemis National Park contains the rare and endangered species like the snow leopard, Bharal sheep, Tibetan Wolf, Eurasian Brown Bear, Lammergeier Vulture, Golden Eagle, Himalayan Vulture and Mountain weasel etc.

Friday, June 26, 2015

Naimisharanya

Naimisharanya is renowned from the time of Satya Yug or Kritha Yug, the most ancient times. It is the holy place where many sages have performed their penance. It is believed that on visiting this sacred place, people are rid of their sins. Upon visiting Naimisharanya, man attains Moksh (liberation) and attains immense powers (the eight powers that are talked about in Hindu philosophy). These words and their importance are mentioned in various ancient scriptures of India. Naimisharanya is also referred to as Naimish or Neemsaar or Neemshaar. There are innumerable Theerth (holy places) in India among which Chakra Theerth, the Pushkar in Naimisharanya ranks first. Naimisharanya is the birthplace of many puraanas. Here, many sages have gathered Knowledge for realizing self. The Universally known Satyanarayan Katha was told by Suth to Shounak and other sages in Naimisharanya. Description of this holy place is found in the first sloka of the story.
It is stated in Devi Bhaagavatham that Naimisharanya is among the nine prominent Aranyas (forest) of the earth. Naimisharanya is the abode of all of the holy places on earth and visiting this place equals visiting all the holy places at once. This evidence is found in Mahaabhaarath. The renowned saint Goswami Tulasi Das wrote about the prominence of Naimisharanya in Raamcharith Maanas. Naimisharanya is the stomach of our deceased elders. Paying homage to our elders at naimisharanya satisfies them and any sins aquried by us will be quenched and it is beneficial to our family. ‪#‎bharat_archives‬ ‪#‎Naimisharanya‬ ‪#‎india‬‪#‎freelance_talents‬ ‪#‎mohitness‬

Saturday, May 30, 2015

Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary


Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary

A drive for 45 kilometers from Kanpur Railway Station leads you to the famous Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary in Uttar Pradesh, a natural choice of the migratory birds when the winter bites become unbearable. Stretching fro about 3 square kilometers with a concentric lake which sustains wild life, Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary in UP is a veritable heaven for ornithologists and common men. Typically designed for lens-men and picnic parties, Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary also houses a Centre for Interpretation of Birds, their behavior and habitats. A perfect ground for gatherings, Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary in UP holds small motels, restaurants and eateries to draw tourist attention.
Since the principal attraction of Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary are migratory birds found mainly during winters, visit here from November to March to have a glimpse of these magnificent creatures. Indulge in the magnetic view of Shovards, Parakeets and Purple Moorhen as you pass through the palm-lined grooves.
Enjoy the avian encounter with Greylag Goose, Cotton Teal, Red Crested Porchard, Shoveller, Mallard and Coot. Mainly the inhabitants of the Himalayan Ranges, Tibet and China these birds come flying over hills and mountains for a respite from the beating cold.

You can watch the peacock in full plumage, white necked stork craning its beautiful neck; Purple Moorhen in ample shades, the cooing of Pigeons in their gayest moods. Spotted Deer with curved horns and the relatively small Barking deer finds a secluded destination at Deer Park inside Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary in UP.

The cooing of doves, the quack of ducks, bell of deer and the buzz of bees choreographs the natural arena in small possible ways, making an immense sound; this is the call of nature, which cannot be ignored by a man. Come and enjoy this natural call at Nawab Ganj Bird Sanctuary in Uttar Pradesh.  ‪#‎bharat_archives‬ ‪#‎india‬ ‪#‎mohitness‬ ‪#‎freelance_talents #nawabganj