
Buxa National Park
| General
Information |
| Place |
Alipurduar Court, Jalpaiguri District |
| Nearest Town |
Alipurduar Court |
| Best time to visit |
October to April |
| Main Attractions |
Royal Bengal Tiger |
The Buxa Tiger Reserve with an area of 759
sq.kms was established in the year of 1982-83 at the north
eastern corner of West Bengal bordering Bhutan and Assam.
The core area of 315sq.kms around the Buxa Duar Fort was declared
a National Park in January 1992. This park is located in eastern
Dooars (rolling humid plains) at 2600 ft above sea level.
The Dooars comprises of deciduous forests which are densely
wooded and grasslands and is home to some of West Bengal's
most varied flora and fauna. This tropical rain forests having
an annual rainfall exceeding 5000mm has 150 species of plants
and a variety of creepers, orchids, grasses, bamboo and cane.
Trees like Teak, sal, Simul, Sishu are found in great numbers.
The fauna of the park comprises 67 species of mammals, including
23 endangered ones and 36 species of reptiles. Besides the
Royal Bengal tiger the second largest in number in West Bengal
after Sunderbans, elephants, bears, civets, giant squirrel,
Gaur, Chital, clouded leopard, wild Buffaloes, antelope and
snakes including the regal Python are found here. About 230
species of birds and innumerable butterflies add colour to
the forest. The rivers of Raidak and Jayanti which flow through
the forest and the Narathali Lake are home to migratory birds
as well as endemic ones which abound the place. The Hornbills
including greater Pied Hornbill, Ibis Bill, Trans Himalayan
Migratory Goosanders, Red-stars, Wag-tails, the rare black
necked crane, migratory common teal, black stork, Large Whistling
Teal, Minivets, White Eyed Poachared are some of the bird
species sighted here.
The headquarters Alipurduar court is a few
km away from the tiger reserve. The two main entry points
are Buxa (24km) and Jayanti (30 Km). Buxa (2600ft) is a two
hour trek through picturesque surroundings from Santlabari,
the starting point. The Buxa Duar fort here was used as a
prison by the British, because of its remoteness. Many freedom
fighters were imprisoned here. After independence, it served
as a refugee camp for Tibetans and Bangladeshis. There is
a 4km further trek to Rovers Point (the land of unknown birds
at 4500ft) or a 14km trek to Roopam Valley in Bhutan from
Bhutan. From Buxa, one can also take the 13km trek to Jayanti
through the beautiful jungle preferably with a guide. There
is a stalactite cave, popularly known as the Mahakal cave
at Jayanti. Another entry point Rajabhatkhawa (17km from Alipurduar)
has an orchidarium, animal rescue centre and a nature interpretation
centre.
Where to stay
A comfortable stay can be enjoyed at the
forest rest houses of WBFDC at Rajabhatkhawa, Nimati, Barobisha,
Raidak, Raimatang, Bhutanghat, Buxa Duar and Jayanti at the
banks of the river Jayanthi nestled between mountains and
thick forests. One can also enjoy the planters lifestyle inside
the park area at Phaskowa tea estate in Buxa tiger reserve.
How to reach
there:
Rail: Nearest rail Junction
is New Jalpaiguri in North Bengal and the nearest station
is New Alipurduar station which has direct connections to
Khanchenjunga, Kamrup and Saraighat Express's etc are some
of the trains.
Road: The headquarters
of the park, Alipurduar is located 175 kms from Siliguri,
West Bengal. NH 31 is the main highway. There are two buses
to the entry point Jayanti (30km) via Buxa from Alipurduar.
One has to get down at Santlabari for the trek to Buxa. One
can also hire cars from Alipurduar to reach these entry points.
Rajabhatkhawa is 12km from Jayanthi.
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