Weblog of Gaurav BiwarePosts RSS Comments RSS

Jungle Safari - Jim Corbett

 

On 30th Jan, we took the afternoon flight from Pune to Delhi, had dinner at Amit’s brother-in-law place and took the late night train from Delhi to Ramnagar, which is the nearest railway station near Jim Corbett.

We were lucky since our train arrived at Ramnagar at 6am in morning and the booking for a day’s Jungle safari inside Jim Corbett starts at 7 am. Also there is a cap on no. of Maruti 4X4 Gypsies that can go in to the forest on a particular day. While I got passes made for the safari from the Jim Corbett office, Amit the master-negotiator , negotiated with the local travel agents for a entire day’s open gypsy, driver and a guide. We had a nice breakfast of Half-fry and tea , rented binoculars and started off for the jungle safari.Even though it was 7:30am, still both of us had our mufflers and hand-gloves on and it became even colder as we went inside the forest.

Situated in the picturesque Kumaon hills in Nainital district, Corbett National Park is the place from where Project Tiger was launched in 1973.The park has a core area of 520 sq. kms with picturesque hilly ridges covered by sal trees. Lower down are the grasslands and bamboo growth. A list of species reported from Corbett includes 582 species of birds, 26 species of reptiles, 7 species of amphibians and 50 species of mammals. The floral diversity is also extremely varied.

The Park is named after the famous hunter and naturalist, Jim Corbett, who popularized this land and its animals in his book “The Man-Eaters of Kumaon“. Corbett recounts many fascinating tales of hunting down man-eating tigers.

We were admiring the beauty of the forest while our guide started filling us on all the info. The main inhabitants of the park are the tiger, elephant, gaur, sambar, chital, wild dog, sloth bear, partridge, pheasant, jungle fowl and numerous other varieties of birds and animals.

There are four varieties of deer in the park, and spotted and hog deer can be seen moving about near the river and in the grasslands and the forests.. There are many opportunities for bird watchers in this park with over 580 species of birds. It is ideal to trek to one of the machans and sit patiently, perched high up, to view the animals and the birds. The Ramganga river flows through the Park and in it one can spot the gharial (fish eating crocodile) and the marsh crocodile.

In fact the deer becomes so common while going around in the forest that after one point of time you simply start ignoring them. Also it was surprising for me to see deers and monkeys ( langoors) together in a herd. The guide pointed out that the monkeys alert the deer in case a tiger is approaching.

The most beautiful of all deers we saw was the sambar, which moves around alone.
Elephants are numerous and move around singly or in herds. We saw a huge group of wild elephants near a lake.

In between we saw a lot of flatlands where forest was burnt down. The guide later explained that this was done purposely by the forest authorities to control forest fires.

After having a lunch, we requested to the driver to allow us to ride the 4X4 Maruti in the forest. He was a little reluctant at first but then okayed it. Driving a open maruti gypsy on a forest trail is an experience in itself. The entire forest route is full of water crossings, small climbs, some flatlands, some rocky patches. It was great thrill to drive on these forest trails.

The different kinds of smells in the jungle are awesome….smell of moss, smell of wild flowers, wild black berries, trees! And when the gold of the sun seeps thru the leaves….its a strange kind of warmth.

For visitors, the tigers sometimes prove elusive. I suppose we were very unlucky the entire day as far as the sighting of “Sherkhan” was concerned. However towards the end of our safari, we met another gypsy whose guide mentioned a tiger sighting a few kms away. Suddenly the entire day’s tiredness vanished and we started to follow the trail mentioned, picking up cues like blood of a fresh kill, the pug marks, etc., which instilled the enigma even more so.

The search lasted around 1.5 hours and at the end we were rewarded. Our guide stood up from his seat and drew our attention across a water body. There we saw the tiger – crossing the water and He vanished in to the forest. Honestly speaking the entire sight of him lasted for not more than 30 seconds. But we were so spellbound by a tiger sighting that none of us remembered to pull our camera out, focus and take a snap. However it was a view of a life-time.

Our jungle safari started from 8am in morning and ended at 5 pm. We had an option of staying back in the forest at night but decided against so since we had a late night (2am) bus to catch to take us to Auli where an another adventure awaited us.

 

 

4 responses so far

Skiing - Auli

 

Auli was the centre point of our entire North India tour. After completing the Jungle Safari in Corbett, we took the late night bus(2am) to Joshimath, 16 kms from Auli.

We reached Joshimath at around 5pm in the evening and were disappointed to know that the rope-way from Joshimath to Auli had made its last round at 4:30pm and there would be no more ferries that day.

Left with no option, we decided to spend the night in Joshimath . Visited the Shankaracharya temple nearby and roamed around in the market. History goes that the great Guru Adi Shankaracharya had first trekked the icy slopes of Auli and also built a temple at Joshimath.

The next day we just reached just in time for the first trip of the ropeway from Joshimath to Auli. This rope-way is India’s longest rope-way (16kms long ). The rope-way offered superb views of many peaks that are visible from Auli – prominent amongst them being the Nandadevi , Kamet, Mana Parbat and Badrinath peak.

Auli is a winter resort run by Garhwal Mandal Vikas Nigam (GMVN).. Auli is open only for 3 months in a year from Jan to March and the period we visited it happened to be peak season.

We rented ski equipment which consisted of ski boots, skis and ski poles. These boots are very heavy and reach almost up to the knee. The instructor told us that one has to sit down on the knees while skiing.

After practicing for 25-30mins(during which we fell thrice !) we decided to head for the slopes.

A 3 km long slope ranging from a height of 2519 to 3049 m is a major attraction in Auli. Also a 500 m long ski-lift carries skiers back to the slope top, thus saving them the trouble and time to bridge up wearing long skis. However since we were complete novices, the instructor took us to a smaller slope around 1km in length and started skiing crashing there !

Falling is a staple in skiing. Learning to fall and stand up is prerequisite to skiing practice because you cannot learn to ground yourself on snow until you take falling classes.Hence our instructor taught us first how to fall and not hurt ourselves.

Although going down the slopes was real fun on the skis, but getting up once we used to crash wasn’t. In fact we ski boots are so firmly attached to the skis, the we had to remove them in order to get up each time after we took a fall, which was essentially how our short-slides used to end for the first couple of hours.

The snow was around knee-length high and the depth used to increase treacherously towards the edges of the slope. On a couple of occasions, I couldn’t control the direction, swayed left and went skiing and then crashed in to the snow which was more than waist-deep.

Taking a turn or side-stepping during skiing requires one to shift his weight on one side before taking a turn. We tried a number of times and would eventually crash. It was towards the later part of the day when we learnt how to stop and change directions during skiing.

However just one day and we learnt quite a few basics of skiing, not to mention that we could ski down almost 700-800mts without crashing which was itself an achievement.

Our hectic schedule dint allow us to stay there and attend a week-long skiing camp that is run by the Garwal Mandal. I guess after a week on the slopes one will be confident enough to whiz down a mountain and execute a fancy parallel turn. There are other benefits too - your tummy disappears & your muscles tone up.

 

 

No responses yet

« Prev - Next »