Ch. Devi Lal Herbal Nature Park

Herbal Park in Haryana, India
30°16′14″N 77°29′11″E / 30.27056°N 77.48639°E / 30.27056; 77.48639Country IndiaStateHaryanaDistrictYamunanagarVillage chuhadpur kalanchuhadpur kalanFounded bythen Chief Minister of Harayana Om Prakash ChautalaNamed forformer Chief Minister of Harayana Chaudhari Devi LalGovernment
 • TypeGovernment of Haryana • BodyForests Department, HaryanaLanguages
 • OfficialHindiTime zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)PIN
135106
Websitewww.haryanaforest.gov.in[dead link]

The Ch. Devi Lal Rudraksh Vatika Herbal Nature Park, in short Rudraksh Vatika, is a 184 acre forested wildlife area, wetland and herbal park for the conservation of biodiversity of over 400 endangered ayurvedic medicinal herbs in Shivalik foothills of Himalayas. It is located on the western bank of Western Yamuna Canal, 1.3 km east of NH-907, in Chuharpur Kalan village of Yamunanagar district of Haryana state in India.[1]

Background

Location

It lies 1.3 km east of NH-907 (from "Nirvan Ashram", which is between Chuharpur Kalan and Khizrabad), on the western bank of Western Yamuna Canal. It is 32 km northeast of Yamunanagar city, 8 km southwest of Tajewala Barrage, 11 km southwest of Hathni Kund Barrage, 32 km south of holy city of Paonta Sahib, 95 km northeast of holy city of Kurukshetra, 87 east of Ambala, 108 km southeast of Haryana state capital Chandigarh, and 272 km north of national capital Delhi.

History

In November 2001, the park was founded by the Forests Department of Government of Haryana,[1] under a central govt funded herbal park scheme. It was established on the forests department's land which already had khair and eucalyptus plantation. Those plants were retained and using the layered forestry technique over 400 rare and endangered herbs and medicinal plants were planted.

In 2002, a statue of Devi Lal, a political dynast of Haryana, was installed at tax payer's expense and the government owned public park was renamed after him during the political rule of one of his son Om Prakash Chautala who was later convicted by the court and imprisoned for scam in an unrelated case.

On 19 April 2003 evening, then President of India, A. P. J. Abdul Kalam, visited the park for an hour. He is highly respected as India's scientist with a moniker "The Missile Man". He planted a sacred rudraksha plant, which initially bore "Teen Mukhi Rudraksha" (3-faced rudraksha seeds) in 2009-2010 and now it produces the highly sought after "Ek Mukhi Rudraksha" (single faced rudraksha seeds). The tree planted by the President Kalam and its "Ek Mukhi Rudraksha" are very popular among visitors. President Kalam wanted to stay overnight at the herbal park which his security staff did not allow. President Kalam, who had planted a smaller herbal grove in Rashtrapati Bhavan, was inspired to visit this herbal park after he learnt it had over 400 species of herbs. President entertained questions from visitors, specially the children, and when asked "why did you not marry" his reply "I never had time for it" was received with all around laughter. He liked the park and wanted to return to the park. The seat on which he sat, has been reserved for him and no one else is allowed to sit on it. Preserved in situ and tagged with his name plate, it still awaits the return of India's now-deceased popular President Kalam.[2]

Flora

The park, spread on 184 acre land with resident forestry staff, is known for the sacred groves with over 400 species of ayurvedic and herbal plants.[2] It is located in the shivalik foothills of himalayas, an area rich in biodiversity of medicinal plant species. It was developed to conserve and propagate medicinal plants in Haryana to meet the rising national and international demand and commercial potential.[3]

Over 400 species of herbs and medicinal plants

Park has over 400 species of medicinal plants, including tulsi (holy basil) with at least five species, hard, baheda, giloy, brahmi booti, shankhpushpi, gular, parijat / harshingar (nyctanthes arbor-tristis), rusha ghass or ginger grass), latkan, double chandani, amaryllis belladonna, lemon grass, lemon, turmeric, plumeria, sehjan, champaka, chameli, tej patta, kumkum, garlic vine, black bamboo, gond katira, nandina, vishnukanta, kaneri, van pyaj, cardamom, etc.

To educate the visitors, herbs and plants are tagged with dual language Hindi-English name plates, which have both the common and scientific name of each species.

Theme-based groves

The themed groves in the park including the following (help expand the partial list):

  • "Sugandh vatika" for fragrant plants.

Fauna

Leopards

A large part of the park is wooded forest which has not been landscaped or developed. This area houses several leopards as this area in the shivalik hills leopard habitat is close to several wildlife national parks such as Kalesar National Park within Haryana, adjacent Simbalbara National Park in Himachal Pradesh and Rajaji National Park in Uttrakhand - all of which are known leopard habitat.

Wetlands and migratory birds

The park has lakes and water body, which are visited by the wildlife. During the winter, October/November to February/March, there are numerous migratory birds including several endangered species which make these wetland in the park their winter home. The park is specially popular with bird watchers in the winter season. During the parched summers the wetland provides water for the fauns of the area.

Visitors facilities

Visitors center

The herbal park has a visitors center cum interpretation center with toilet and drinking water. Park has ample car parking, paved walking trails with seats and landscaping. There is a forest "machan" (observation tower) for viewing the area which is popular among visitors as a selfie point.

Forest eco-resort

There are 5 air-conditioned forests cottages with ensuite bathroom, built with sustainable renewable materials, for visitors to stay overnight. These cost INR 1950 per night in 2019. There is a friendly government employed caretaker cum guide.

Nursery and plant sales

The park has an in-situ government run nursery which always has a ready stock of 200,000 - 250,000 medicinal plants which are sold to farmers and visitors on an affordable fixed-price rate list decide by the government. Green house has large selection of plants.

Concerns

Demand for enhanced conservation and research

Ecologists have demanded establishment of wildlife corridor, by purchasing the land and planting the appropriate habitat, to Yamuna river bank and Kalesar National Park. Wetland must be expanded by constructing additional water channels with selective plants species appropriate for migratory birds. In situ breeding centre for the endangered gharial (which could be a fenced off wetland) and native freshwater turtle species. Schemes of various departments must be converged, purchase contiguous land for expansion, establish Maharana Pratap Horticultural University's research station at this park with the view to convert it to Haryana state's first "Shivalik Herbal and Wildlife University" focused on flora and fauns suitable for the geo-climatic conditions of shivalik area of Haryana.

Demand for improved customer services and monetisation

Visitors have demanded expansion and upgrade of facilities. To achieve this, economists have suggested leasing the resort to boost service, revenue, employment and tax collection.

Demand for renaming after horticulturist or wildlife expert

Civic society and voters have been demanding the end to the misuse of tax-payers state funds and institutes to perpetuate the hegemony of political dynasties by wasting money on their statues and by naming government funded institutes and entities after them specially in the areas in which they had no expertise. There is demand to rename the institute after one of Haryana state's prominent well-awarded horticulture, agriculture, or wildlife scientist or expert, and the politician's statue be remodelled after some post-independence martyr of the armed forces hailing from this area.

Images of type of herbs species at park

See also

Citations

References

  1. ^ a b PM News Bureau. "Herbal Park at Hisar". old.projectsmonitor.com. Archived from the original on 23 October 2014. Retrieved 23 October 2014.
  2. ^ a b c APJ Abdul Kalam Death Anniversary: हरियाणा से खास लगाव था मिसाइल मैन डॉ कलाम का, 18 साल पहले यमुनानगर के हर्बल पार्क देख रह गए थे हैरान, Dainik Jagran, 27 July 2021.
  3. ^ Ch. Devi Lal Herbal Nature Park in Haryana, Haryana Tourism, accessed 28 July 2021.
  4. ^ Panchvati trees, greenmesg.org, accessed 26 July 2021.
  5. ^ Peepal for east amla for west, Times of India, 26 July 2021.

External links

  • Google map
  • v
  • t
  • e
Protected areas of Haryana
National Parks
Wildlife SanctuariesConservation Reserves
Deer ParksZooBreeding Centres
  • Portal:India
  • Category: Haryana
  • Wikiproject: Haryana
  • v
  • t
  • e
Andaman and
Nicobar Islands
Andhra Pradesh
Arunachal Pradesh
Assam
Bihar
Chhattisgarh
Goa
Gujarat
Haryana
Himachal Pradesh
Jammu & Kashmir
Laddakh
Jharkhand
Karnataka
Kerala
Madhya Pradesh
Maharashtra
Manipur
Meghalaya
Mizoram
Nagaland
Odisha
Rajasthan
Sikkim
Tamil Nadu
Telangana
Tripura
Uttar Pradesh
Uttarakhand
West Bengal
  • Category
  • v
  • t
  • e
Topics
Districts and divisions
Ambala division
Faridabad division
Gurgaon division
Hisar division
Karnal division
Rohtak division
Major cities
Culture
Economy
  • Power stations and power organisations
Places of interest
Sarasvati civilization (Indus Valley civilization – IVC)
Archaeological
Baoli (Stepwells)s
Buddhist and Hindu Sites
Haveli
  • Nangal Sirohi
  • Hemu Ki Haveli in Rewari
  • Noor Mahal in Karnal
  • Gurugram: (Sikanderpur, Mohammadpur Jharsa, 12 Biswa haveli in Gurgaon gaon, Mahalwala haveli in 8 Biswa of Gurgaon gaon)
Forts
Hills
Caves
Historical
National Parks & Wildlife Sanctuaries of Haryana
Endangered Wildlife Breeding
Zoos in Haryana
Herbal Parks
Lakes
Dams
Rivers
Religious
Offices
Public places
Extreme Corners of Haryana
Highest-lowest of Haryana
Oldest of Haryana
Elections
Chief Ministers
Governors
State agencies
Sports
Venues
Associations
Teams
  • Portal:India
  • Category: Haryana
  • Wikiproject: Haryana