A Kanger Cave Shrine

A Kanger Cave Shrine
A small shrine is crowned by a peepal tree at the entrance to a cave in Kanger Valley National Park.
Kanger Valley National Park
A small shrine is crowned by a peepal tree at the entrance to a cave in Kanger Valley National Park.
Near one of the entrances to Kanger Valley National Park in Bastar, you can find this saal tree representing the extensive forests of Shorea.
A representation of a Gond Woman and a tree stands at the entrance to Kanger Valley National Park
A representation of a Gond Man and a tree stands at the entrance to Kanger Valley National Park
In Kanger Valley National Park, a rocky formation made of ancient seashells stands next to a forest tree
In Kanger Valley National Park, a rocky formation made of ancient seashells stands next to a forest tree
This forest tree is not too far from the grove of Teak trees in Kanger Park where Ram Teak and his brothers grow
This tree stands alone in the farmfields of Bastar, near Kanger Valley National Park
On the border between Orissa and Chatisgarth, this semal rises above some magnificent limestone rock formations carved by the Kolab River.
Deep in the forests of Bastar in Kanger Valley National Park, a grove of four ancient and large teak trees is named after the four brothers in the Ramayana, and this big tree just outside can represent the Demon King Ravana