Here is the desktop calendar for April 2007. Click on the picture below to get the image in 1024×768 size.
About the Image
This image was made at Auli, Uttaranchal, India. The mountains seen are the Garhwal Himalayas and far below in the valley flows Alaknanda, one of the tributaries of Ganga. The farthest mountain in the image, a little to the right of center is Mt.Nanda Devi, one of the tallest mountains in India.
Also see
* Images from Auli taken in 2005
* Images from Auli in 2006.
* Auli Trip Report
Author: Stephen Alter
Publishers: Penguin Books
Pages: 327
Unlike what it’s title seems to indicate, Elephas Maximus is no science book for the students of biology, but a book for every one who has slightest interest in Indian Elephants, or Asian Elephants to precise. Stephen Alter has done considerable research on every aspects of the elephants in India and has presented it well enough to attract readers of every kind. In his own words –
In this book, I have tried to tell elephant’s story in India through myth, art and literature, as well as something of its biology and natural history.
He travels all through the country in search of the elephants and visits them in the wilderness of National Parks, in temples in captivity, in breeding centers of state forest departments and anywhere else elephants might exist as myth or reality. He writes about their biology and natural history, besides covering cultural aspects of their relationship with man, historical status and position of elephants in India and also man-animal conflict. Alter also ponders on Ganesha, the elephant faced Hindu god. He digs through the ancient scriptures of Gajasutra and Kalidasa’s Meghadoota to discover the role and status of elephants in the history of our society.
The emotional aspect of relationship between man and pachyderm is given considerable importance and is one of the highlights of the book. He writes about Mahouts who love their elephants and remain sensitive to the needs of the giant, about conservation efforts in India, and caring for the elephants. The pains of capturing elephants by Khedda and other measures in the past have been well elaborated.
Also notable are his coverage of elephants at various locations all over India, including Mysore, Guruvayur temple, Sonepur Mela, Mudumalai elephant camp, Corbett and Rajaji National Parks, Kabini and Kaziranga.
The contents of the book are well organized, has a good flow and makes a good reading for those with even the slightest interest on pachyderms.
The India Travel Blog newsletter dispatch is sporadic and infrequent, but I am managing to send it out once a month for last couple of months. Posted here is the March newsletter that was emailed today. To get this occasional newsletter, which announces important happenings in India Travel Blog and also summarizes the recent content, subscribe to it by keying in your email id on the box at the top-right corner
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MARCH 2007 DESKTOP WALLPAPER CALENDAR
March 2007 desktop wallpaper calendar features picturesque Matupetty Dam near Munnar, Kerala. Go here to download it.
MONTH OF FEBRUARY ON INDIA TRAVEL BLOG.
In Feb, I completed the series on Kerala, which I was writing for a month. The index to all articles on the Kerala series are here. The series covers the places Bandipur, Wayanad, Kozhikode, Guruvayur, Cochin and Periyar.
Other than the Kerala series, I wrote about folk festival Janapada Jaatre that happens in Bangalore. Read about it here
I am also trying to introduce other travel bloggers who write on India, and the first of them is Mridula, whose interview you can be read here
I am starting the series on my journey to North East India on second week of March, which should keep running on the blog for next two months. Keep dropping by the blog home for regular updates.