Sunderbans National Park
Sunderbans - Tiger Reserve
Area : 1,330sq km
Status : World Heritage Site & Biosphere Reserve
Established : 1984
Nearest Airport : Dum Dum Airport (Kolkatta) 166km
Nearest Railhead : Canning 105km
Best Time to Visit : November to February
¤ Sunderbans - The World Heritage Site
The holy Ganga journeys down the Himalayas and flows along Indias
vast monotonous plains into the state of West Bengal. Towards the
southern tip of the state, the land and the Bay of Bengal break out
into a lively welcoming fandango to form a fresco of tangled mangrove
swamps the Sunderbans. The Sunderbans National Park are spread
out over an area of 16,500sq km in the prostrate delta towards the
mouth of the Ganga, and form the worlds largest estuarine
forests that constitute 80% of Indias total mangrove swamps. A
World Heritage Site, the Sunderbans are also amongst the richest
biosphere reserves in the subcontinent.
The silt deposit islands on the Sunderbans Delta are connected to the
mainland through a labyrinthine waterway system, with some islands
being practically impenetrable. This has turned out to be a boon in
disguise because the ecology of the area and these fecund marshlands,
wired in thick foliage, are able to support an astonishing variety of
plant and animal life. Twenty-six of the fifty broad mangrove types
found in the world, thrive in the Sunderbans.
¤ A Home To Largest Tiger Population
In order to preserve this clearly unique biosphere, the area between
River Hooghly and the River Teulia was declared a National Park in the
year 1984. The protected reserve covers a stretch of 1,330sq km, and
also constitutes the core zone of the National Park.
Compared to other reserves in the world, Sunderbans National Park has
the largest population of tigers, and also abounds in salt water
crocodiles, olive Ridley turtles, Gangetic dolphins, chitals (spotted
deer), fishing cats, wild boars, otters, rhesus macaques, monitor
lizards, snakes, innumerable fishes, crabs, lobsters, shrimps, worms
and a host of birds including kingfishers, storks, herons, Brahmin
ducks, arghilahs, ibises, water fowl and egrets, to name only a few.
¤ How To Reach
Air : Getting to the
Sunderban National Park is no mean feat. The closest airport is the
Dum Dum Airport in Kolkata, at a distance of 166km from the
Sunderbans.
Rail : The nearest railhead, at a distance of 105km, at
Canning, is not close either to this elusive destination. From Canning
you have to reach Sonakhali, from where the adventure takes on another
dimension altogether.
Boat Ride : You must now take a boat ride that lasts a good
six to seven hours, to Gosaba. This is followed by a rickshaw ride to
Pakhirala from where yet once again a boat ferries you across to
Sajnekhali the base of the Sunderbans National Park.
At a distance of 50km from the Sunderbans National Park, Gosaba is
the nearest town. Many travellers find it more convenient to take a
bus from Kolkata to Sonakhali or Basunti via Babu Ghat. It is also
possible to hire your own private boat from Canning! For the
uninitiated, the journey provides the rites of passage to rural
Bengal.
¤ The Tiger Law Reigns Supreme
Though the Sunderbans National Park boasts of the largest number of
tigers, spotting one effortlessly is not half as easy. That human
existence is oftentimes at the mercy of the tiger population is
evident from the fact that roughly 20 man-eating cases are reported
every year. Pretty much a land where the jungle law reigns supreme,
where only the fittest are meant to prevail.
The islands are inundated twice every day due to tidal action! It is
interesting to see how the tiger, like the other life forms, has
adapted to this habitat against such odds. The Sunderbans tiger is an
adept swimmer, can survive on brackish water, and is also known to
feed on fish and sea turtles.
Though you may cruise around the maze of islands, waiting with bated
breath to catch a fleeting glimpse of the beautiful cat you may or may
not see, your odyssey shall nevertheless be a memorable one, with many
coloured kingfishers diving for their kill and the curious life of a
myriad tiny creatures weaving their own magic into it. |