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Location:
Bharatpur, Rajasthan.
Coverage Area : 232 sq. Kms.
Main Attractions: Spoon Bills
Best Time To Visit : The Keoladeo National Park is open
throughout the year. August-October is the breeding season, so
the birds are best left alone then. The best season for
visiting this place is between October to February when
the migratory birds come to visit this park from all over the
gl obe.
Accommodation : There are rest houses, lodges,
dormitories and hotels. Rajasthan Tourism provides good accommodation
at its hotel, 'Saras'. Inside the park, the Bharatpur Forest
Lodge is maintained by the ITDC. Shanti Kuteer, Circuit
House, Dak Bungalow are also good for a comfortable stay. Park Palace,
Govind Niwas and the Tourist complex are the other choices.
Almost all the houses around the park lend out one or
two rooms to visitors. These are cheap and provide comfortable
stay.
Keoladeo
Ghana National Park, one of the most spectacular bird
sanctuaries in India, nesting indigenous water- birds as well
as migratory water birds and water side birds. It is also
inhabited by sambar, chital, nilgai and boar. More than 300
species of birds are found in this small park of 29 sq. km. of
which 11 sq. km. are marshes and the rest scrubland and
grassland. Keoladeo, the name derives from an ancient Hindu
temple, devoted to Lord Shiva, which stands at the centre of
the park. 'Ghana' means dense, referring to the thick forest,
which used to cover the area. While many of India's parks have
been developed from the hunting preserves of princely India,
Keoladeo Ghana is perhaps the only case where the habitat has
been created by a maharaja. In earlier times, Bharatpur town
used to be flooded regularly every monsoon. In 1760, an
earthern dam (Ajan Dam) was constructed, to save the town,
from this annual vagary of nature. The depression created by
extraction of soil for the dam was cleared and this became the
Keoladeo lake. At the beginning of this century, this lake was
developed, and was divided into several portions. A system of
small dams, dykes, sluice gates, etc., was created to control
water level in different sections. This became the hunting
preserve of the Bharatpur royalty, and one of the best duck -
shooting wetlands in the world. Hunting was prohibited by
mid-60s. The area was declared a national park on 10 March
1982, and accepted as a World Heritage Site in December 1985.

Fauna
:
Over
350 species of birds find a refuge in the 29 sq km of shallow
lakes and woodland, which makes up the park. A third of them
are migrants, many of whom spend their winters in Bharatpur,
before returning to their breeding grounds, as far away as
Siberia and Central Asia. Migratory birds at Keoladeo include,
as large a bird as Dalmatian pelican, which is slightly less
than two meters, and as small a bird as Siberian disky leaf
warbler, which is the size of a finger.
Other migrants include several species of cranes,
pelicans, geese, ducks, eagles, hawks, shanks, stints,
wagtails, warblers, wheatears, flycatchers, buntings, larks
and pipits, etc. But of all the migrants, the most sought
after is the Siberian Crane or the great white crane, which
migrates to this site every year, covering a distance of more
than half the globe. These birds, numbering only a few
hundred, are on the verge of extinction. It is birds from the
western race of the species, that visit Keoladeo, migrating
from the Ob river basin region, in the Aral mountains, in
Siberia via Afghanistan and Pakistan. There are only two
wintering places, left for this extremely rare species.One is
in Feredunkenar in Iran, and the other is Keoladeo Ghana. The
journey to Bharatpur takes them 6,400 kms from their breeding
grounds, in Siberia. They arrive in December and stay till
early March. Unlike Indian cranes, the Siberian crane is
entirely vegetarian. It feeds on underground aquatic roots and
tubers in loose flocks of five or six.
Arrival
Information :
--
By Rail : Bharatpur has its own railway stations with
many major trains halting here.
-- By Air : The nearest airport is that of
Agra.
--- Government Museum, Bharatpur which gives a glimpse of past
splendour.
--- Just 32 kms from Bharatpur, is the Deeg Palace. This
strong and massive fort was the summer resort of
the rulers of Bharatpur and has many palaces and gardens.
-- Nearby Cities : Bharatpur
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