From the highest point of the
Kanchenjunga peak at 8598 meters to the lowest point at
0 meters at the Indian Ocean, India is the land that
spells variety.
The 7th largest country in
the world, it covers a total area of 3,287,590 sq km in
area. It lies in south Asia jutting into the Indian
Ocean in its south, undulating over the frozen wasteland
of the Himalayas in the north, braving drought in its
desert-like west and surviving fierce floods in its
east. A substantial portion of northern India is the
fertile plain where the great Gangetic riverine system
irrigates vast expanses of the land bringing agrarian
well being. The Deccan Plateau in Central India is rich
in minerals. The Western and Eastern Ghats fringe the
southern peninsula and are the setting for coffee, tea,
cashew plantations, the Nilgiri langur and gaur, and the
silversmith Toda tribal.
In the north-west, Pakistan borders
India, and to the east lie China, Nepal, Burma, Bhutan
and Bangladesh. To the south lies the teardrop shaped
island nation of Sri Lanka. Beyond the peninsula the
waters of the Bay of Bengal in the east, the Arabian Sea
in the west and the Indian Ocean at the very south wet
the shores of India’s 7000 km long coastline. Great
vanquishing rivers are worshipped. The Narmada, Godavari,
Krishna, Cauveri, the Brahmaputra, Ganga and Yamuna
criss-cross the terrain bringing prosperity and
fertility and often wreaking havoc in flood. They
inspire songs and they bring misery; increasingly they
are bringing hydroelectric power to millions across the
country.
The Tropic of Cancer splits India in
half. Sub tropical jungles house the Royal Bengal tiger,
multiple species of deer and antelope, the Asian
elephant, the Common, Golden and Nilgiri langurs, the
one horned rhino in the forests of Assam, prides of
Asiatic lions in the dry wilds of Sasan Gir in the west.
And there is much more: river dolphins in the Ganges and
Brahmaputra, crocodiles, waters that are teeming with
mahseer, trout, carp, fresh water prawns, woods with
fishing cat, civets, leopard, the cobra, krait and
python, the grey mongoose, the gaur, the sloth bear.
There are over 1200 bird species
including the Great Indian Bustard, the Malabar
hornbill, Paradise Flycatcher, cormorants, egrets,
darters and migratory Siberian cranes in the winter.
India’s jungles, rivers, streams are simply bursting
with wildlife, much of it protected in her 80 National
Parks and 441 Sanctuaries. Camels in the deserts of
Rajasthan, stoic yaks, sure-footed Himalayan Tahr and
mountain goats in the north extend the scope beyond just
that which is typical to Asian sub tropical forests of
sal, shisham and teak. There are mangrove forests in the
east and evergreen conifers in the upper climes of
Himachal Pradesh and Jammu and Kashmir.
Common flowers include roses,
bougainvilleas, sunny marigold, water lilies, lotus and
fragrant jasmine. In the breathtaking Valley of Flowers
a sea of lilies, poppy, daisies, holly, pansy, geranium,
zinnia, petunia, fox, caryopsis dianthus, saxifrage and
calendula stretches out in the shadow of towering
snowbound Himalayan peaks.