North Bengal

By admin, 10 April, 2026

Few destinations in eastern India reward the curious traveller quite like the twin anchors of Balurghat and Bangarh in Dakshin (South) Dinajpur district. This is not a place of manicured tourist trails or packaged heritage walks. It is a corner of Bengal where mustard fields blaze yellow in January, the Atreyee River catches the light at dusk, migratory birds wheel over Pala-dynasty lakes, and the ruins of one of ancient India’s great cities break quietly through the soil near the banks of the Punarbhaba.

By admin, 7 April, 2026

The Jaldhaka River, also known as the Dichu, begins its journey at Bitang/Kupup Lake in Sikkim's Gangtok District, near Jelep La. After its ascent in Sikkim, the river traverses approximately 40 km through Bhutan's Samtse District before crossing into India at Bindu, the final village of North Bengal situated on the Indo-Bhutan frontier. From this point, the river surges southward through a confined, timbered gorge, gaining both breadth and speed as it moves past Jhalong and its iconic power station.

By admin, 6 April, 2026

Hidden deep inside the emerald forests of Buxa Tiger Reserve, Raimatang is a tiny village that feels almost suspended in time. Located on the river Raimatang in Dooars and surrounded by forest, hills and river, Raimatang village has been a popular place for nature-loving people. There is no heritage monument to tick off, no railing-lined viewpoint, no shop selling refrigerator magnets.

By admin, 27 March, 2026

Tucked away in the northern reaches of West Bengal, Raiganj Wildlife Sanctuary (locally known as Kulik) is a hidden marvel that defies its modest size. Far from the subcontinent's sprawling wilderness reserves, Raiganj is an intimate haven: a 1.3 sq km patch of social forestry nestled in the semi-urban embrace of Uttar Dinajpur. Yet, this compact sanctuary offers one of India’s most remarkable avian spectacles.

By admin, 24 March, 2026

This little cluster in the eastern Dooars foothills marks the precise moment where manicured tea gardens surrender to the untamed Neora Valley wilderness, and the Murti River begins its boulder-hopping dance through the valleys below.

By admin, 24 March, 2026

If Jaldapara is the headliner, Chilapata is the dark, mysterious indie B-side that true fans swear by. Hidden in West Bengal’s Alipurduar district in the Eastern Dooars, this compact, dense sal forest reserve (~20 km²; figures vary by boundary definitions) isn’t just “a jungle” so much as a living wildlife thoroughfare, an elephant corridor linking Jaldapara National Park with the Buxa Tiger Reserve, right near the Bhutan border.

By admin, 24 March, 2026

A compact “offbeat triangle” in the Eastern Himalaya where mornings are all about Kanchenjunga light-shows, afternoons smell like pine and damp earth, and evenings end early with chai, momos and a jacket. Lava is the practical base (permits, transport, a small bazaar); Loleygaon is forest-and-views (plus the famous canopy walk); Rishop/Rishyap is the quiet lookout, with minimal fuss and maximum mountains.

By admin, 24 March, 2026

Forget everything you think you know about Darjeeling district. While tourists jostle for selfie spots on Darjeeling's Mall Road and queue for the toy train, barely 50km away lies a hill station that seems to have missed the memo about mass tourism entirely. Welcome to Mirik, where the loudest sound you'll hear is the splash of paddle boats on Sumendu Lake and the whisper of wind through pine forests.

By admin, 23 March, 2026

If Darjeeling is the grand dame of the Eastern Himalayas (polished, bustling, and slightly fading), Neora Valley is her wild, untamed cousin who refuses to follow the rules. Spanning 88 sq km in the Kalimpong district, this UNESCO World Heritage Site nominee is one of the few remaining tracts of virgin forest in Eastern India. It is dense, mist-laden, and notoriously inaccessible.

By admin, 23 March, 2026

Forget the frenetic energy of Kolkata or the crowded malls of Siliguri. Gajoldoba is where the plains take a deep breath before leaping up into the Himalayas. Known officially by the poetic moniker "Bhorer Alo" (Light of the Dawn), this massive reservoir formed by the Teesta Barrage is a wetland wonderland.

Here, the water is glass-still, the Kanchenjunga floats on the horizon like a hallucination, and the silence is broken only by the flutter of thousands of migratory wings. It is raw, relatively unpolished, and undeniably magical.