Photography

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, 9 April, 2026

Few Indian cities carry the weight of national ambition as visibly as Durgapur. Conceived in the late 1940s by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and West Bengal Chief Minister Bidhan Chandra Roy as a showcase of post-independence industrial might, and meticulously planned by American architects Joseph Allen Stein and Benjamin Polk in 1955, Durgapur rose from forested riverbanks and coalfield fringes to become what Nehru proudly called a 'temple of modern India'.

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, 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, 27 March, 2026

Tarapith is one of India's most significant Shakti Peethas and a major pilgrimage centre in West Bengal's Birbhum district. This small temple town, located along the banks of the Dwarka River, draws thousands of devotees who come to worship Goddess Tara, a fierce manifestation of Kali. Tarapith is a place where ancient Tantric traditions remain vibrantly alive, where cremation grounds serve as sacred spaces, and where the line between the mystical and mundane blurs in fascinating ways.

By admin, 27 March, 2026

Welcome to the rugged frontier of Bankura, a landscape painted in the rust-red hues of laterite soil, ablaze with fiery Palash forests, and guarded by ancient hills that rise abruptly from the plains. While the crowds flock to the terracotta temples of Bishnupur, the true adventurer heads north to the twin sentinels of the district: Susunia and Biharinath.

By admin, 26 March, 2026

Where industrial might meets spiritual serenity, Asansol and its neighbouring Maithon region offer an unexpected blend of experiences in West Bengal's heartland. West Bengal's second-largest city sits along the Damodar River, serving as a bustling industrial hub, yet just 30 kilometres away lies Maithon (nicknamed the “Kashmir of Koylanchal”) where a spectacular dam and reservoir create a weekend paradise of natural beauty and engineering wonder.

By admin, 26 March, 2026

Sandwiched between the commercial clamour of Digha and the resort-heavy Mandarmani, the Tajpur-Shankarpur Belt remains one of West Bengal's best-kept coastal secrets. This quieter stretch of golden beaches, casuarina groves, and fishing villages offers travellers an authentic glimpse of rural Bengal's maritime culture. Here, the pace is slower, the beaches are cleaner, and the experience feels genuinely off the beaten path. 

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 the frenetic pace of Kolkata for a day and head roughly 25–30km north to this riverside town where a distinctly Danish chapter still clings to the Hooghly breeze. For 90 years (1755–1845), Serampore was Frederiksnagore, a Danish trading post that grew into a surprisingly urbane riverfront settlement, its skyline shaped by a Protestant church spire, its streets lined with neoclassical façades, and its social life fed by trade, education, and print.