Friday 7 November 2014

PANNA NATIONAL PARK

Panna is located in the Vindhya range, this tiger reserve spreads into two income locale, Panna and Chhatarpur. Like Bandhavgarh, Panna was additionally the chasing store of its past leaders of Chhatarpur and Bijawar royal states. The Gangau Wildlife Sanctuary embodying woods of Panna Forest Divisions (north and south) was made in 1975. The range was developed and its legitimate status lifted to a national park amid 1981. The ensured region was accumulated under Project Tiger 1994. Panna is somewhat an open, dry landspace, with the geology and water conveyance representing the spatial vicinity of wild creatures. There is a huge drop in rises, generally known as seha. These spots give satisfactory spread to wild creatures. Vultures and different raptors perching on precipices along the waterway course are a typical sight in Panna. The fauna comprises of tiger, panther, Chowsingha, Sloth bear, Nilgai, Chinkara, hyena and little gatherings of Chital. More than 200 types of feathered creatures have been spotted. Both Gharial and Mugger are found in the Ken River. The spots of vacationer enthusiasm toward Panna are Pandava Fall, Kamasan Fall, Dhundhawa Fall, Bhauradeh Fall, Bhadar and Badgadi Fall, Raneh Fall and hollow artistic creations.





Best season:

Panna has trademark tropical atmosphere. Summers are uncomfortably hot with greatest temperatures that could climb to 450c, however the season presumably bears the best risk of locating natural life. Winters are cool and average with temperatures generally under 250c with the base plunging to around 60c. The rainstorm last from July to mid-September with normal precipitation of around 1,423 mm., after which a long, draught results. 

The park is open from November to June, which would be the best season for a visit. The Pandav Falls are however best gone by amid the rainstorm.

How to get there:
By Air The nearest airport is Khajuraho, well connected from Delhi, Varanasi, Mumbai etc. 


By Rail : Satna, at a distance of around 90 km, is the nearest railway station. It is a major railway hub and is connected to many places in central and western India.


By Bus : The nearest bus stand is Panna connected to Khajuraho and many other places in Madhya Pradesh by a good road network. Madla, at a distance of around 24 km south west of Khajuraho, is a good transport centre. One can get buses and other road transport modes from here to the Panna National Park. To reach by road from Delhi, take the NH2 to Agra, NH3 to Gwalior, NH75 to Panna via Jhansi, Bamitha and Madla.

Distances from Major Cities
Khajuraho : 37 km
Delhi : 580 km
Jhansi : 176 km





Planing for Trip ? 


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