INTRODUCTION
Room Amenities at Pench Jungle Camp
Each tent housed on the permanent foundation has a spacious and elegantly furnished living room . Spacious en suite bathroom has running hot and cold water, flush toilet, space for shower and a vanity counter. Each tent has 220 V electricity connection with battery recharging facility.
Food & Dinning Facilities at Pench Jungle Camp
Inspired by the ethnic architecture, a centrally located apartment structure houses, an open and spacious dinning hall and modern kitchen serving vegetarian and non- vegetarian Indian, Continental and Chinese cuisine. Open bar "Chaupal" located at The Parkfire place has a relaxed and friendly atmosphere and is an ideal place to relax after a day of sight seeing.
Other Camp Facilities / Amenities at Pench Jungle Camp
* Staffed with resident naturalists to make your park visits most informative.
* Well- stocked library.
* Recreation room for informative slide shows and wildlife discussions.

* Games room with a host of indoor games like chess and carom, Billiard table.
* Golfing net for practice.
* Medical Plant Nursery
* 400 ft. long water stream with Fish, Lilly & Lotus.
* A Lake spread out in 12 acres adjoining The Camp.
* Slide of the Art Wildlife Research Centre.
What To Wear and Carry
Casual summer clothing with natural colors is best from March to May. Sunglasses
and sun hats are preferable. From November to February, carry warm clothing
for chilly mornings and misty evenings. Battery torches are advised.
Book
Now Places to See Around Pench
Bandhavgarh
National Park A wildlife retreat, where history and nature
meet, Bandhavgarh is not too far away from Kanha. Set amidst the Vindhyan ranges,
the Park has a series of ridges running through it. Initially just 105.40 sq.
km. in area, Bandhavgarh with 25 resident tigers, was noted for its high density
tiger population. Today, it has been extended to an area of 437 sq. km.
About half the Park is covered with fine stands of sal, while mixed forests are
found in the higher reaches of the hills. Stretches of bamboo and grasslands extend
to the north.
The main viewing area is still in the core of the Park
with its 32 picturesque, wooded hills. An ancient fort up on a precipice, 800
metres high, dominates the Park.
Bandhavgarh's history goes back 2000
years in time and the earliest signs of habitation can be seen in the Caves excavated
from the cliffs to the north of the fort. Brahmi inscription here, date back to
the 1st century BC A hunting reserve of the roya! family of Rewa in more recent
times, Bandhavgarh was declared a Park in 1968. This is where the famous white
tigers of Rewa were discovered.
Wandering through the Park on elephant
back, the chances of seeing a tiger are quite good. Also to be seen here are nilgai,
chausingha, chital, chinkara, wild boar and sometimes a fox or jackal.
Other inhabitants of the Park include the muntjac, jungle cat, ratel, hyena, porcupine,
the rhesus macaque and the black-faced langur. About 150 species of birds are
also found here and include the migratory birds that arrive in winter like the
steppe eagle and various water birds.
It is possible to climb up to
the Bandhavgarh fort for a breathtaking bird's-eye view of the Park and there
is also a small population of black buck that lives here, protected from the predators
below. General Information:
Best Time to Visit: November to June.
Nearest Town: Umaria (30 km)
How to Get Here: Air: Jabalpur
(170 km), Khajuraho (210 km) Rail:Umaria (30 km), Jabalpur (170 km)
Kanha National Park

Located
in the Mandia district of Madhya Pradesh, the Kanha National Park is a Tiger Reserve
that extends over 1945 sq. km. of undulating country. Elevations range from 450
to 900 meters.
A horseshoe shaped valley bounded by the. spurs of the
Mekal ridge gives Kanha an interesting topography. The Surpan River meanders through
Kanha's central maidans - grasslands that Dover the extensive plateaus. Steep
rocky escarpments along their edges offer breathtaking views of the valleys below.
The grasslands at Kanha interspersed with forests of sal, teeming with
varieties of deer - the barasinqha, chital (spotted deer), chousingha, nilgai,
the majestic gaur (Indian bison) and wild pig, is 'tiger country'. It is ideal
for viewing both the predator and the prey.
It was here at Kanha that
the eminent zoologist George Schaller undertook the first ever-scientific study
of the tiger. Another landmark at Kanha is the preservation of the "hard
ground' barasingha (cervus duvauceli branderi) - the only surviving population
of this Central Indian subspecies. This was achieved by extending the grasslands,
relocating villages and by increasing the habitat.
The animals at Kanha
are best observed from elephant back and the open country makes the chance of
sightings reasonably good. Deer are seen along the maidans and gaur at Bamhindadr
or in the Bishanpura Sondhar- Ghorella area of the Mukki range. This area is also
ideal for spotting the dhole or wild dog. spotting the dhole or wild dog. Langurs,
wild boar, water fowl and birds are also commonly seen.
General Information:
Best Time to Visit: March to June
Nearest Town: Mandla (65
Km)
How to Get Here: Air: Jabalpur (170 km), Nagpur (270 km)
Rail: Jabalpur (170 km), Nagpur (270 km)
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| Oriental Bird Club | B
N H S | Care for the Wild International | World
Wildlife Fund |
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