
The thick forest of Bandhavgarh National Park sits in a bowl encircled
by cliffs and wooded Vindhyan mountains, and its plains have a number
of grass and reed covered wetlands where Kingfishers dive and Egrets
sit poised, hunch-backed, in the shallows. Up above, vultures nestle
in holes in the sheer cliffs.
The Bandhavgarh jungle, when it is large enough, becomes a living
self-sustaining organism providing its own climate, atmosphere,
water and nutrition through its recycling systems. It even has
a sleep wake cycle. As more light fills the sky, Bandhavgarh begins
to awaken.
The Flora in Bandhavgarh National Park Bandhavgarh
has a large variety of tree cover. Bandhavgarh has an excellent
tree and foliage concentration. About half the Bandhavgarh park
is covered with fine trees of Sal, while mixed forests are found
in the higher reaches of the hills. It is only in the slightly higher
lands that it changes to a more mixed vegetation of sali, saj, saja,
dhobin etc. Stretches of bamboo and grasslands extend to the north.
The main wildlife viewing is still done in the core of the park
with its 32 picturesque, wooded hills.
The Fauna in the Bandhavgarh National Park The
density of it's big cat population has made Bandhavgarh famous
across the globe. Bandhavgarh is blessed with a large variety
of natives in terms of animals. It is possible to sight tigers,
leopards, gaur (Indian Bison-although some say this is no longer
seen), chital (spotted deer), Sambar deer, Dholes, nilgais, wild
boars, chinkaras, sloth bears, rhesus macaques, black faced langurs,
jungle cats, hyenas, porcupines, jackals, foxes, wild dogs, chausinghas
and ratels, among others.
The Avi-fauna in the Bandhavgarh National Park
Despite being famous for it's four legged inhabitants, Bandhavgarh
National Park is also a bird lover's paradise.
Keep
a look out for white browed fantails, steppe eagles, green pigeons,
grey malabar hornbills, black and white malabar hornbills (quite
a rare sighting), blossom headed parakeets, parakeets, blue bearded
bee eaters, green bee eaters, white bellied drongos, owls, Jerdon's
and gold fronted leaf birds, minivets, woodshrikes and the lovely
paradise flycatchers.
Jeep & Elephant Safari One can enjoy exploring
the wildlife in Bandhavgarh by two ways - Jeep Safari and Elephant
Safari. Jeep safaris are undertaken during the early morning hours
till evening. A forest department guide is always their with the
visitors on these jeep trips taken inside the park. Elephant safari
trips are organised for tiger tracking early in the morning.
How To Get There??
Air : Khajurao at 230-kms is the most convenient
airport connected by various domestic airline services with Agra,
Delhi, Varanasi.
Rail : The nearest railhead Umaria at 30-kms
is on the Katni-Bilaspur section of South-Eastern Railway. Another
convenient railhead Satna (117-kms) is on the Bombay-Howrah main
line of the Central Railway.
Road :Bandhavgarh National Park is situated on
the Satna-Umaria & Rewa-Umaria highway. Some of the important
road distances are: Khajuraho (via Satna)230-kms, Varanasi (via
Rewa) 340-kms, Katni 75-kms, Rewa 115-kms, Umaria 30-kms, Kanha
250-kms. Madhya Pradesh State Transport Bus Services are also
available from Rewa, Satna, Katni and Umaria.