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Bandhavgarh National
ParkThe 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.
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Corbett National ParkLocated
in the foothills of the Himalayas is the majestic Corbett National Park.
Home to a variety of flora and fauna, it is famous for its wild population
of Tigers, Leopards and Elephants. Corbett national park was established in
1936, as the Hailey National Park.
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Kanha National ParkHow
many of you have seen a tiger before? Most of the answers will be ambiguous
because everyone wants to see a tiger. Then where can one spot a tiger?
Well, even if there are circuses and zoo's all over India, there's some kind
of a thrill you experiences when all of a sudden you came across a Tiger
roaming freely in the wilderness of its natural habitat: the fields and
forests of India.
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Ranthambore National
ParkSituated in Eastern Rajasthan, where the Aravali Hill
ranges and the Vindhyan plateau meet, the Ranthambhore National Park was
once the hunting preserve of the Maharajas of Jaipur. The rivers Chambal in
the South and Banas in the North bound the Ranthambore National Park.