Sunderban Trips - Tour Packages for Sunderban
is a vast area in India as well
as a portion in Bangladesh.
Tours in Sunderbans
has the largest Tiger Reserve
and National Park in India.
Tours in Sunderbans are a part of the world's
largest delta, formed by the rivers
Ganges, Brahmaputra and Meghna.
It is located on the lower end
of the Gangetic West Bengal.
It
is also the world's largest estuarine
forest.
The Travel Tours to Sunderbans is intersected
by a composite network of tidal
waterways, mudflats and small
islands of mangrove forests, and
presents an excellent case of
ongoing ecological processes.
The area is known for its wide
range of fauna.
The most famous
among these are the man eating
Bengal Tigers, and numerous species
of birds, spotted deer, crocodiles
and snakes also inhabit it.
It
is projected that there are now
400 Bengal tigers and about 30,000
spotted deer in the area These
tigers are well known for the
significant number of people they
kill; estimates range from twenty
and eighty people per year.
They
are the only maneating tigers
left in the world
Almost seventy percent of the
area is under saline water and
many creeks and tributaries feed
the area.
It is difficult to approach
it but it is one of the most stunning
and adventurous places on earth.
It is a land dominated by tidal
creeks and waterways, the only
way to access the area is on motorized.
Trip to Sunderbans is the home of man-eating
tigers, crocodiles, sharks and
snakes The dark and sinister mangroves
hides some of the most fascinating
birds in the world like the Swamp
Partridge, a Brown-winged Kingfisher,
a Grey Headed Lapwing, a Pallas's
Fish Eagle and Mangrove Whistler.
The fringes of Tours in Sunderbans play
host to many local diseases and
the visitor is well advised to
spend time on land away from the
central part, before venturing
into the the National Park.
The best time to visit the Travel Tours for Sunderbans
national park is during the months
of September and May.
Winter is
the time to see the Royal Bengal
Tiger the riverbanks
The East India Tours has been a vessel of
blending different cultures and
ethnic groups coming and settling
here.
The earliest mention of this region
was by the Chinese explorer, Chang
Kien, in 100 B.C.
The Dravidians
were the earliest inhabitants
of this state.
Huen Tsang, the
well-known Chinese traveler, visited
this region in the 7th century.
Assam comprised the whole of the
Northeast region when it was made
a state in 1947.
Consequently,
a number of other northeastern
states were carved out of Assam,
starting with Nagaland in 1963
and ending with Arunachal Pradesh
in 1972.
Northeast of India is the land
of enchanting mountains, green
valleys and unspoiled rivers.