Dayara Resort

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Dayara Resort +91-9690418997 Dayara Resort https://www.indiamart.com/dayara-resort/ The Dayara Resort : British Colonial style with Garhwali and Himanchali elements the Cottages and Dormitories are. About Us The Dayara Resort : British Colonial style with Garhwali and Himanchali elements the Cottages and Dormitories are constructed with a minute eye of quality, comfort and beauty with open verandas windows and skylight brighten the rooms and allow an unhampered view of snow-capped Shrikanth Peak and Draupiadi Ka Danda. Each cottage have its own private and landscaped scenic beauty. Dayara Resort is the perfect starting point for outdoor activities and relaxation, combined with adventure. Chardham Yatra 2011 ! four abodes of God in India Char Dham yatra is one of the most famed spiritual journeys of Hinduism. Nestling in the lofty peaks are the four most holy pilgrimages of India -Yamunotri, Gangotri, Sri Kedarnathji and Sri Badrinathji, collectively referred to as the Char Dham yatra(four pilgrimage centres) of Hinduism. Every year a lot of people visit these Chardham Yatra. Chardham can be split into Char that means four and dham meaning destinations. For centuries, saints and pilgrims, in their search for the divine, have walked these mystical vales known in ancient Hindu scriptures as 'Kedarkhand' If the scriptures of Hindu Religion are to be believed, the holy centres of Gangotri, Yamunotri, Badrinath and Kedarnath - collectively called the Chardham Yatra Packages (meaning four sacred spots) - are the most sacred of all pilgrimages. Undertaking a journey to these places will not just wash away one's sins butensure release from the cycle... For more information, please visit https://www.indiamart.com/dayara-resort/aboutus.html OTHER SERVICES P r o d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Gangotri Glacier Tour Dayara Tour Package Package Glaciers Tour Package Bandarpunch Glacier Tour Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Yamunotri Glacier Tour Kush Kalyan Tour Package Package Har Ki Doon Tour Package Dokriyani Bamak Tour Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Dodi Tal Tour Package Sahastra Tal Tour Package Kedar Tal Tour Package Nachiketa Tal Tour Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Kalindikhal Pass Tour Lamkhaga Pass Tour Package Package Gangotri National Park Tour Govind National Park Tour Package Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Govind Wildlife Sanctuary Sudarshan Tour Package Tour Package Shivlinga Tour Package Thalay Sagar Tour Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Chaukhamba Tour Package Gangotri Mountains Tour Package Meru Peak Tour Package Deluxe Chardham Tour Package P r o OTHER SERVICES: d u c t s & S e r v i c e s Do Dham Yatra Tour Package Chardham Taxi Tour Packages Regular Chardham Tour Economy Chardham Tour Package Package F a c t s h e e t Nature of Business :Service Provider CONTACT US Dayara Resort Contact Person: Sushil Rawat Village & P. O. Barsu District Uttarkashi - 249135, Uttarakhand, India +91-9690418997 https://www.indiamart.com/dayara-resort/.
Recommended publications
  • SURVEY in the NANDA DEVI DISTRICT. E. E. Shipton
    SURVEY IN THE NANDA DEVI DISTRICT SURVEY IN THE NANDA DEVI DISTRICT BY E. E. SHIPTON Read before the Alpine Club, l\1arch g, 1937 OUNTAINEERS will have been interested to learn that the Survey of India is now engaged on a new !-inch map of the mountain regions of Kumaon and Garhwal. Previous surveys, as produced on the present !-inch sheets 53 N and 62 B, had been confined almost entirely to the popu­ lated and revenue-producing areas in or near to the great arterial valleys. Most of the glacier-cov~red country and the remoter valleys of these sheets are very sketchily drawn, in many places, indeed, so sketchily as to bear no resemblance whatever to the ground in question. Over much of the country, too, it has been found necessary to extend the primary triangulation. While engaged on this task in the Badrinath-Kedarnath range, Major Osmaston found that the whole trunk of the Gangotri Glacier was, in fact, several miles W. of the position allotted to it on the map. I hope that now at last we shall have a final solution to the topographical problems of this area. which have excited so much discussion as a result of the various expeditions which have recently brought back a lot of vague data about the range. The usual method employed for hill surveys in India is plane­ tabling by Indians, 'vho are each responsible for a section of the area. These men work with remarkable speed and neatness and, under the close supervision of their officers, they produce very good work.
    [Show full text]
  • National Ganga River Basin Authority (Ngrba)
    NATIONAL GANGA RIVER BASIN AUTHORITY (NGRBA) Public Disclosure Authorized (Ministry of Environment and Forests, Government of India) Public Disclosure Authorized Environmental and Social Management Framework (ESMF) Public Disclosure Authorized Volume I - Environmental and Social Analysis March 2011 Prepared by Public Disclosure Authorized The Energy and Resources Institute New Delhi i Table of Contents Executive Summary List of Tables ............................................................................................................... iv Chapter 1 National Ganga River Basin Project ....................................................... 6 1.1 Introduction .................................................................................................. 6 1.2 Ganga Clean up Initiatives ........................................................................... 6 1.3 The Ganga River Basin Project.................................................................... 7 1.4 Project Components ..................................................................................... 8 1.4.1.1 Objective ...................................................................................................... 8 1.4.1.2 Sub Component A: NGRBA Operationalization & Program Management 9 1.4.1.3 Sub component B: Technical Assistance for ULB Service Provider .......... 9 1.4.1.4 Sub-component C: Technical Assistance for Environmental Regulator ... 10 1.4.2.1 Objective ...................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Melt Water Characteristics of Gangotri Glacier, Headwater of Ganga River Manohar Arora* & Jatin Malhotra National Institute of Hydrology, Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India
    Roorkee Water Conclave 2020 Melt Water Characteristics of Gangotri Glacier, Headwater of Ganga River Manohar Arora* & Jatin Malhotra National Institute of Hydrology, Roorkee, Uttarakhand, India Abstract: Behavior of glacier plays an important role in runoff delaying characteristics of the glacier. Changes in delaying characteristics of the runoff over the melt season can be understood by studying the variation in time to peak (tp) and time-lag (t1) between melt generation and its emergence as runoff. In this study, the runoff delaying characteristics of the Gangotri Glacier in the Garhwal Himalayas (glacierized area 286 km2; drainage area 556 km2) have been studied. For this purpose, hourly discharge and temperature data were monitored near the snout of the glacier for the entire ablation period (May-October, 2010). In the early stages of the ablation period, poor drainage network and stronger storage characteristics of the glaciers due to the presence of seasonal snow cover resulted in a much delayed response of melt water, providing a higher tl and tp. In the beginning of melt season, the night time flow is almost equal to day time flow, but in the later part of the melt season, night time flow is slightly lower than the day time flow. This analysis suggests that storage characteristics are much stronger in the early part of melt season and reduce as the melt season progresses. Keywords: Gangotri Glacier, Himalayas, Melt Season, Runoff Delay Characteristics, Storage Characteristics 1. Introduction Glaciers fed rivers provide much of the water supply in some parts of the world. All the major south Asian rivers originate in the Himalayan and their upper catchments are covered with snow and glaciers.
    [Show full text]
  • Ganga As Perceived by Some Ganga Lovers Mother Ganga's Rights Are Our Rights
    Ganga as Perceived by Some Ganga Lovers Mother Ganga’s Rights Are Our Rights Pujya Swami Chidanand Saraswati Nearly 500 million people depend every day on the Ganga and Her tributaries for life itself. Like the most loving of mothers, She has served us, nourished us and enabled us to grow as a people, without hesitation, without discrimination, without vacation for millennia. Regardless of what we have done to Her, the Ganga continues in Her steady fl ow, providing the waters that offer nourishment, livelihoods, faith and hope: the waters that represents the very life-blood of our nation. If one may think of the planet Earth as a body, its trees would be its lungs, its rivers would be its veins, and the Ganga would be its very soul. For pilgrims, Her course is a lure: From Gaumukh, where she emerges like a beacon of hope from icy glaciers, to the Prayag of Allahabad, where Mother Ganga stretches out Her glorious hands to become one with the Yamuna and Saraswati Rivers, to Ganga Sagar, where She fi nally merges with the ocean in a tender embrace. As all oceans unite together, Ganga’s reach stretches far beyond national borders. All are Her children. For perhaps a billion people, Mother Ganga is a living goddess who can elevate the soul to blissful union with the Divine. She provides benediction for infants, hope for worshipful adults, and the promise of liberation for the dying and deceased. Every year, millions come to bathe in Ganga’s waters as a holy act of worship: closing their eyes in deep prayer as they reverently enter the waters equated with Divinity itself.
    [Show full text]
  • To Download Form and Brochure, Click Here
    GIRIVIHAR Kedar Taal (4750 m) Trek 2019 Region: Garhwal Himalayas of Uttarakhand Maximum Elevation: 4920 mts Grade: Moderate to Difficult GIRIVIHAR has since its conception in 1964, been devoted to outdoor adventure activities like hiking, rock climbing and mountaineering. Adventure Activities inculcate courage, patience, determination, leadership, confidence, team spirit and cultivate a love for the environment and respect for nature. Girivihar is announcing its High Altitude trek to Kedar Taal, located in Gangotri region of Garwhal Himalayas. This trek is open for experienced trekkers and veterans. Just ensure that you are excited about the trip and are in good physical shape (comfortable walking for 6-8 hours in a day). However, it would be wise to discuss it with one of our Trek Leader before booking. Kedartal (also known as Shiva's lake) is a glacial lake situated at an altitude of 4,750 metres (15,580 ft) in the Garhwal region of the Himalayas in India. From Gangotri, the trek takes you through the gorge of the Kedar Ganga passing by the forest which slowly converts to bushes, then to grasses and then finally found only in sparse between rocks as you gain altitude very fast, since Gangotri itself is over 3000 meters from where you start your trek.The first campsite of Bhojkharak is already over tree line. Another 2 days of trek brings you to the ultimate setting of a serene lake surrounded by white snow cladded peaks giving you great views of Thalay Sagar and Bhrigupanth. The glacial lake of Kedar Tal is located in spectacular settings with the elegant peaks of Bhrigupanth and Thalaysagar making a perfect background.
    [Show full text]
  • Ganges Strategic Basin Assessment
    Public Disclosure Authorized Report No. 67668-SAS Report No. 67668-SAS Ganges Strategic Basin Assessment A Discussion of Regional Opportunities and Risks Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized Public Disclosure Authorized GANGES STRATEGIC BASIN ASSESSMENT: A Discussion of Regional Opportunities and Risks b Report No. 67668-SAS Ganges Strategic Basin Assessment A Discussion of Regional Opportunities and Risks Ganges Strategic Basin Assessment A Discussion of Regional Opportunities and Risks World Bank South Asia Regional Report The World Bank Washington, DC iii GANGES STRATEGIC BASIN ASSESSMENT: A Discussion of Regional Opportunities and Risks Disclaimer: © 2014 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank 1818 H Street NW Washington, DC 20433 Telephone: 202-473-1000 Internet: www.worldbank.org All rights reserved 1 2 3 4 14 13 12 11 This volume is a product of the staff of the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development / The World Bank. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this volume do not necessarily reflect the views of the Executive Directors of The World Bank or the governments they represent. The World Bank does not guarantee the accuracy of the data included in this work. The boundaries, colors, denominations, and other information shown on any map in this work do not imply any judgment on part of The World Bank concerning the legal status of any territory or the endorsement or acceptance of such boundaries. Rights and Permissions The material in this publication is copyrighted. Copying and/or transmitting portions or all of this work without permission may be a violation of applicable law.
    [Show full text]
  • Drainage System
    CHAPTER DRAINAGE SYSTEM ou have observed water flowing through 2006) in this class . Can you, then, explain the the rivers, nalas and even channels reason for water flowing from one direction to Yduring rainy season which drain the the other? Why do the rivers originating from the excess water. Had these channels not been Himalayas in the northern India and the Western there, large-scale flooding would have Ghat in the southern India flow towards the east occurred. Wherever channels are ill-defined or and discharge their waters in the Bay of Bengal? choked, flooding is a common phenomenon. The flow of water through well-defined channels is known as ‘drainage’ and the network of such channels is called a ‘drainage system’. The drainage pattern of an area is the outcome of the geological time period, nature and structure of rocks, topography, slope, amount of water flowing and the periodicity of the flow. Do you have a river near your village or city? Have you ever been there for boating or bathing? Figure 3.1 : A River in the Mountainous Region Is it perennial (always with water) or ephemeral (water during rainy season, and dry, otherwise)? A river drains the water collected from a Do you know that rivers flow in the same specific area, which is called its ‘catchment area’. direction? You have studied about slopes in the An area drained by a river and its tributaries other two textbooks of geography (NCERT, is called a drainage basin. The boundary line Important Drainage Patterns (i) The drainage pattern resembling the branches of a tree is known as “dendritic” the examples of which are the rivers of northern plain.
    [Show full text]
  • National Geographic Traveller INDIA 97 the Destination Uttarakhand
    THE DESTINATION UTTARAKHAND The climb towards Mayali Pass, a 16,400-high crossing A HYMN connecting Bhilangana and Mandakini valleys, is a vision in white. It is the third mountain crossing on the challenging Auden’s Col trek that begins in Gangotri and ends at FOR THE Kedarnath, in Uttarakhand. NON- BELIEVER Lessons in belief and beauty on an arduous Himalayan trek across Auden’s Col in Uttarakhand TEXT & PHOTOGRAPHS BY NEELIMA VALLANGI MAY 2018 | NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC TRAVELLER INDIA 97 THE DESTINATION UttARAKHAND An aura of despair hung inside the quivering tent where six of us were huddled late in the afternoon. A snowstorm raged on outside, in a desolate glacial valley surrounded by Himalayan peaks. A few kilometers ahead of us, obscured by the blizzard, lay Auden’s Col, a daunting mountain pass deep in the hallowed mountains of Uttarakhand. Suddenly, one of our guides, Happy Negi, peeked into our tent, and offered hot halwa as prasad with a reassuring smile, unperturbed by the lashing snow and freezing winds. Our frayed nerves began to calm down; after all, these prayers had worked so well over the past six days. Last June six others and I were attempting to cross the col, an 18,000-foot saddle between the Gangotri and Jogin peaks that provides a rare passage from Gangotri to Kedarnath. Owing to Sunsets are stunning at The triangular peak the tough terrain and a long trudge across a crevasse-ridden the Kedarkhadak campsite of Thalay Sagar in Kedarganga valley. looms over Kedartal. glacier, few have attempted the trek to this pass after it was first crossed in 1939 by John Bicknell Auden, an English geologist and explorer then working with Geological Survey of India.
    [Show full text]
  • Regular Article Psychrophilic Microbial
    REGULAR ARTICLE PSYCHROPHILIC MICROBIAL DIVERSITY AND PHYSICOCHEMICAL CHARACTERISTICS OF GLACIERS IN THE GARHWAL HIMALAYA, INDIA Rahul Kumar* and Ramesh C. Sharma Address (es): Dr. Rahul Kumar Laboratory of Environmental Microbiology and Biotechnology, Department of Environmental Sciences, H.N.B. Garhwal University (A Central University), Srinagar Garhwal- 246174, Uttarakhand, India *Corresponding author: [email protected] ABSTRACT The main objective of the current research work was to investigate the physicochemical properties of ice samples collected from the snout of three important glaciers located in the Garhwal Himalaya along with the psychrophilic microbial diversity. This study was carried out for two years from 2015 to 2016 with two sampling attempts each year. Ice samples were collected from all the pre-identified sampling sites at a depth of 5cm to observe and record the characteristics and to isolate and identify the psychrophilic diversity of microorganisms. Overall fourteen physical and chemical properties of ice samples were recorded. The psychrophilic microbial diversity was identified through the morphological, biochemical and MALDI-TOF-MS techniques. The α–diversity of microbes in the ice of Satopanth glacier was 17 with 08 bacterial species, 04 actinomycetes species and 05 fungal species. However, the α–diversity of microbes in the ice of Bhagirathi-Kharak glacier was also 17 with 06 bacterial species, 05 actinomycetes species and 06 fungal species. The α–diversity of microbes in the ice of Gangotri glacier was 19 with 09 bacterial species, 05 actinomycetes species and 05 fungal species. The present research work can be a decent reference for additional investigations in a similar discipline. The available data will also help the researchers to study the psychrophiles, their existence in glaciers and their importance to society.
    [Show full text]
  • Gangotri - Gomukh - Tapovan Trek 2015
    Gangotri - Gomukh - Tapovan Trek 2015 The Holy River Ganges is the most sacred river in the Hindu religion and its source at Gomukh at the Gangotri glacier. The glacier measures about 30 kms long. The Gangotri glacier is surrounded by peaks belonging to the Gangotri Group of mountains, including some that pose a challenge to mountaineers, such as Shivling, Thalay Sagar, Meru, and Bhagirathi III. The glacier follows a North Westerly route located below Chaukhamba Mountain, the highest peak of the group. Gaumukh is one of the holiest places for Hindu pilgrims who come here to witness the birth of Mother Ganga. The trek takes one to Gomukh (cows mouth), the mythological source of the River Ganges, which is at the snout of the Gangotri glacier. Area: Garhwal Himalayas Duration: 09 Days Altitude: 4463 mts/14638 ft Grade: Moderate Season: May - June & Mid August – October Day 01: Delhi – Haridwar – Rishikesh In the morning take AC train from Delhi to Haridwar at 06:50 hrs. Arrival at Haridwar by 11:25 hrs and meet our guide, then drive to Rishikesh by car. Upon arrival at Rishikesh met our representative and check in to hotel. Evening free to explore the area. Dinner and overnight stay at the hotel. Day 02: Rishikesh – Uttarkashi (185 kms/5-6 hrs) Morning after breakfast proceed for Uttarkashi (1150 mts), which takes 7-8 hrs drive. Upon arrival check-in at Hotel. Evening free to explore the surrounding by your own. Overnight stay at hotel. Uttarkashi is the principle town in the region. Nehru Institute of Mountaineering is situated here.
    [Show full text]
  • Leader's Report
    MT. THALAY SAGAR (6904 M / 22651 FT) EXPEDITION, 2008 ORGANISED BY : MOUNTAINEERS’ ASSOCIATION OF KRISHNANAGAR CHURCH ROAD, KRISHNAGAR-741101, NADIA, W.B. LEADER’S REPORT 1. Name of the Association : Mountaineers’ Association of Krishnanagar. 2. Name of expedition : Mt. Thalay Sagar (6904 MT./22651 FT.) Expedition, 2008. 3. Name of the Peak with height in metres and six figure co-ordinates : Thalay Sagar – 6904 mtr. / 22651 ft. - 30o 51’ 29” N / 78o 59’ 50” E. 4. Nominal roll of team : I. Shri Basanta Singha Roy – Leader of the expedition and climbed Mt. Thalay Sagar (6904 mtr.) II. Shri Asok Roy – Reached upto Camp-I (16000 ft.). III. Shri Ajoy Krishna Bhattacharya – He was the Equipment In-charge and reached upto Camp – II (17500 ft.). IV. Shri Subrata Brahma – He was the Photographer & Medical Officer of the expedition and reached upto Camp – II (17500 ft.). V. Shri Biswanath Saha - He reached upto Camp – II (17500 ft.). VI. Shri Tapan Roy – He was the Quarter Master and Manager of the expedition. He stayed at Base Camp. VII. Shri Bijay Sarkar – He reached upto Camp-I (16000 ft.). VIII. Shri Asim Kumar Mondal - He reached upto Camp-I ((16000 ft.). IX. Shri Ranjan Kumar – He stayed at Base Camp. 5. Liaison with local administration and other agencies (name, designation, address, phone No., e- mail ID). Assistance received or hurdles faced if any : We had informed the District Magistrate & Superintendent of Police of Uttarkashi District and the Principal of Nehru Institute of Mountaineering, Uttarkashi about our mission. However, we received assistance from the Food Supply Department, Uttarkashi and the Divisional Forest Office, Uttarkashi.
    [Show full text]
  • Mapping the Ganges
    ALUMNI ALUMNI olution: “I really had to just walk the land.” His fieldwork—more than 25,000 pho- tographs, 15 sketchbooks’ worth of draw- ings, 1,000 journal entries, and 350 original Mapping the Ganges charts—became the first comprehensive survey of the region’s infrastructures, cit- ies, and landscapes in 50 years, and is the A decade spent exploring India’s dynamic sacred river subject of his new book, Ganges Water Ma- chine: Designing New India’s Ancient River (2015). The project is “a huge, historical ex- by nell porter brown cavation,” notes Orchard professor in the history of landscape development John R. Stilgoe, Acciavatti’s thesis adviser. “That n the summer of 2005, Anthony is fed by many rivers besides the dominant book would not exist if he had not gone to Acciavatti, M.Arch. ’09, and his local Ganges, which runs from the Gangotri Gla- those places. Anthony has enormous cour- driver were in rural, north-central cier in the Himalayas through northeast- age—and physical courage does not come India, not far from the sacred city of ern India into Bangladesh before emptying up much in the academy anymore.” IVaranasi. They had stopped to watch the into the Bay of Bengal. The enterprising “soupy, brown water” of the Ganges River mapmaker chose to focus on the thousand The ganges rushes through mountainous gush out of the mammoth, 1970s-era Nara- miles between the river’s source and Patna, tracts and critical animal habitats, including inpur Pump Canal system, which irrigates a stretch with relatively few secondary that of the endangered freshwater dolphin, nearly 300 square miles of prime agricultural streams.
    [Show full text]