#Jungle walk in chitwan national park
Sloth bear's long claws are used to tear up termite mounds and to climb tree. Once they have opened a hole, they blow away excess dirt then noisily suck out the insects through a gap in their front teeth. To do so they close their nostrils and use their lip like a vacuum nozzle,
#Two day jungle walk in chitwan national park
He saw Tiger in tamor lake
#Jungle walk in chitwan national park
Rhino
Jeep safari in chitwan
Adventure jeep safari in chitwan national park
#Tiger in chitwan national park
3 days jungle walk inside the chitwan national park.
Encounter with a leopardd in Chitwan National Park, Nepal
Walking safari with United Jungle Guide Service. Thank you Prakash & Om Prakash !
#SlothBear, #ChitwanNationalPark
Full day jeep safari
#sloth bear
We saw many animals alongwith sloth bear in two and half day jungle walking.
#Elephant Breeding Center
Elephant babies wrestling
Udrive Dubai Rental Car Service is New Concept in Dubai 2018.(English)
Social Media blocked in Pakistan Skype ,What'sUp and Facebook.
Jungle Trekking Chitwan in Nepal.
Dangerous Crocodiles in the World in Chitwan Nepal.
Jungle Safari at Jeep in The Chitwan National Park Nepal 2018. (5K)
Queens Park Hotel
Stop at Queens Park Hotel to discover the wonders of London. The property features a wide range of facilities to make your stay a pleasant experience. To be found at the hotel are concierge, elevator, Wi-Fi in public areas, business center, safety deposit boxes. Each guestroom is elegantly furnished and equipped with handy amenities. The hotel offers various recreational opportunities. For reliable service and professional staff, Queens Park Hotel caters to your needs.
Arunachal Pradesh - the Unexplored Paradise
Here is our little paean to our favourite Indian state! A place where no one locks their homes, oranges are sold in the market without a price and you pay whatever you feel the farmer deserves to get for them. Indeed, a place where the greed of modern India has not caught up (except for a rare few of the political types in power, and those who sold off the dams and emptied the river valleys of their trees, to make them!)
Arunachal Pradesh is a state of India, located in the far northeast. It borders the states of Assam and Nagaland to the south, and shares international borders with Burma in the east, Bhutan in the west, and Tibet (now occupied by the People's Republic of China) in the north. The majority of the territory is claimed by the People's Republic of China as part of South Tibet. The northern border of Arunachal Pradesh reflects the McMahon Line, a controversial 1914 treaty between the United Kingdom and a Tibetan government, which was never accepted by the Chinese government, and not enforced by the Indian government until 1950. Itanagar is the capital of the state.
Arunachal Pradesh means land of the dawn lit mountains in Sanskrit. It is also known as land of the rising sun. Nestled in India's distant northeast lies this little known state. Though it lies within the political boundaries of modern India, it is culturally distinct from much of the rest of the country. Tribal living and diverse faiths combined with unique cultural practices make Arunachal a fascinating frontier for modern exploration.
Arunachal is one of India's Eight North Eastern States. It shares its border with Bhutan, Tibet and Myanmar. Much of the land is mountainous, covered by the Himalaya in the north and west and the Patkai hills in the east. The state is also home to countless valleys and rivers, the mightiest being the Siang. The climate of Arunachal ranges from alpine to temperate and sub-tropical, varying with elevation. The state receives heavy rainfall during its monsoon season making it the perfect home for dense forest and an enormous diversity of plant and animal life. This part of India is appropriately known as the unexplored paradise.
It is a thinly populated state positioned in the foothills of the Himalaya. Just over one million people inhabiting an area a little over 83,000 square miles. Much of the Arunachal population live in tribes whose ancestors are believed to have migrated from pre-Buddhist Tibet two to three thousand years ago. Oral histories and material culture, including the traditional way of dressing and religious practices, are the strongest indicators of a Tibeto-Burman origin among many of the tribes.
Ziro, a town in the lower Subansiri region of Arunachal Pradesh. With a population of just over 12,000, it is a town of mostly rice and bamboo growers. Apatani as the local tribe is called, derives their name from the Apa Tani plateau where Ziro sits. Tourists are drawn here to see their distinct lifestyle and bamboo village. Here you will find ancient customs and traditions still being carried out and untouched by time.
Outside of Ziro and Tawang, much of Arunachal remains relatively unexplored by the outside world. With its rich and diverse tribal cultures, it is a unique face of India. As globalization expands its reach into India's far eastern state, the tribes of Arunachal have become less and less isolated. However, despite a shift in cultural practices towards a more modern lifestyle, Arunachal still remains rooted in its traditional religious and cultural ways and its people continue to celebrate its heritage.
No matter where you are in Arunachal one will see how fairs and festivals have become an essential part of their culture. Full of dancing and singing, tribes have different dances be it the Buddhist dance drama or the colorful swinging of the tribes on the Apa Tani Plateau.
The Arunachalis have a very low stress level in their lives. It is their spirit that can be seen in their unique song and dance. Arunachalis seem to already be where the rest of the world wants to get to -- a group of communities that live close together, in happy isolation from the rest of the world, with little or no antagonism, leading self-sufficient, healthy and balanced lives.
This footage is part of the professionally-shot broadcast stock footage archive of Wilderness Films India Ltd., the largest collection of imagery from South Asia. The Wilderness Films India collection comprises of thousands of hours of high quality broadcast imagery, mostly shot on HDCAM 1080i High Definition, HDV and XDCAM. Write to us for licensing this footage on a broadcast format, for use in your production! We are happy to be commissioned to film for you or else provide you with broadcast crewing and production solutions across South Asia. We pride ourselves in bringing the best of India and South Asia to the world... Reach us at rupindang [at] gmail [dot] com and admin@wildfilmsindia.com.
Eric Dinerstein: What Elephants Know | Talks at Google
Dr. Eric Dinerstein is the Director of the Biodiversity and Wildlife Solutions Program at RESOLVE. He focuses on applying new technologies to better protect and monitor endangered wildlife. For much of the past 25 years he was Chief Scientist at the World Wildlife Fund.
He came up with the idea of a Global Tiger Summit in 2010 to double the world's tiger population by 2022. More recently, he's been developing cost-effective night-vision goggles for wildlife rangers and smart camera anti-poaching devices. His most recent effort is to promote the concept popularized by Dr. E.O. Wilson of Nature Needs Half—setting aside half of the Earth’s terrestrial ecoregions to save a living planet and avoid the extinction and climate crises.