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Best birdwatching sites around Bangalore for all that is a part nature passionate. Various bird species and stunning natural ...
Located 18 km from Bengaluru, Hesaraghatta Lake was built across the Arkavathi River to meet the drinking water requirements of Bengaluru city way back in 1894.
Beyond its tech image, Bengaluru is home to breathtaking rock formations shaped by time, weather, and legend. Explore these unique sites where nature and history collide you'll never see the city the ...
Hesaraghatta Lake was created in 1894, across the Arkavathy River – a tributary to the Cauvery – to meet the drinking water requirements of Bengaluru.
Hesaraghatta Lake was once a major source of drinking water for the city that died a slow death in 1998 due to over exploitation of groundwater in the region and dumping of sewage and debris in ...
Hesaraghatta?s friends finally managed to get 30 sturdy young village men to do shramadan every Sunday for eight weeks. A three-km channel, that connected the lake to a catchment area, was opened and ...
Hesaraghatta Lake, which spreads over 900 acres, had received 10 feet of water following heavy rainfall recently. This was the only lake from where waster was sourced to the city before 1970.
It takes a village to protect a species or a lake, as the campaign to create the Greater Hesaraghatta Conservation Reserve in Karnataka shows. Conservationists spend decades saving nature but ...
Hesaraghatta grasslands protected as conservation reserve, crucial for biodiversity, water security, and climate change mitigation near Bangalore.
There is no water in the Hesaraghatta Lake anymore, but there is plenty up at the Hesaraghatta Bar.
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