GOA WILDLIFE
Though Goa is filled with beaches and monuments, it comes as a surprise to many that Goa has got a rich repertoire of wildlife too. The Bondla Sanctuary in this small India state of Goa is famous for its wildlife rehabilitation centre. Here the animals who have been orphaned or injured, wander into inhabited areas where they get tender loving care. And they thrive. This is the specialty of this wildlife sanctuary. There has been a population explosion of porcupines at this wildlife sanctuary that now rustle around with their usual, bad-tempered bustle. However, Bondla's greatest attraction is its profusion of birds. In twenty minutes you can spot 11 different species including a Grey Hornbill.
GOA FORESTS
Goa forests account for thirty per cent of the state of Goa and though tigers and elephants do wander into the 240 sq. km of the Bhagwan Mahavir Wildlife Sanctuary in Goa, they don't stay for long: possibly because there isn't enough of their favourite food available at these Goa forests or perhaps because centuries of hunting by the Portuguese at these Goa forests had built in an instinctive fear for these Goa forests among the larger animals. However, if lucky, you can spot Indian bison, the Gaur, in the Goa forests of Molem, a part of this large sanctuary.
If you are a lover of greenery, then the forests in Goa are definitely going to interest you. Goa forests vary from moist deciduous to evergreen. Giant trees roped with lianas and decorated with hosts of epiphytes like orchids, tower into the sky. The undergrowth in this Goa forest is so thick that an army of wild animals could have been lurking inside hidden from one's eyes. Very often, those creeper-palms entwined up the trunks of their hosts seeking their place in the sun. You feel lost in a civilization of vegetation, a vast self-perpetuating environment at these Goa forests. These Goa forests give you a feeling of being the first human being to visit these Goa forests.
GOA WATERFALL
Once out of the dense forests of the sanctuary in Goa, you can emerge into the dramatic Goan valley of Dudhsagar. A tributary of the Mandovi river cascade down for 600 metres. Its water gushes under a railway bridge and foams white towards the spectators. If you cross the bridge by train you will chug over the mid-point of the highest cascade and, if the wind is right, you'll feel the spray in your compartment. But if you see the falls from below, this 'ocean of milk' which is what Dudhsagar means, seems to be pouring out of the sky!