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Friday, 10 June 2011

Ooty Funtastic Hill Station of South India

Called the Queen of Hill Stations picturesque, green Udhagamandalam better known, as Ooty is the most popular hill station in the SouthLocated in the Western ghats at a height of 2240m, Udhagamandalam is the headquarters of the Nilgiris district where the two ghats ranges meet. Nature has been generous with this region, which is by far the most beautiful in the state. Apart from coffee and tea plantations, trees like confiers, eucalptus, pine and wattle dot the hillside in Udhagamandalam and its encirons. Summer temperature is rarely higher than 25�c with a minimum of 10�c and winter is are distinctly cooler with a high of 21�c and a low 5�c. Curiously enough, this slice of paradise remained unknown to the great southern dynasties and it took the British to discover it in the early 1800s. They were, however, not the first inhabitants of this land as a tribe called Todas had been living there long before the British came, claiming that the Nilgiris had been their home since time immemorial. But the credit for modernising Udhagamandalam and making it accessible goes to the British who constructed the first railway line in the area and made it the summer capital of the Madras Presidency. Ooty with smaller hill stations of Coonoor - 19 kms and Kothagiri 31 kms from Ooty are the other hill stations of this district. Nilgiri is India's first biosphere. It has been declared as one of the 14 'hotspots' of the world because of its unique bio-diversity. Nilgiri presents a truly breath taking kaleidoscope of visual treats and soul stirring experience. General Information Ooty Coonoor Kotagiri Area 36 sq. kms. 13.2 sq. kms. 26.39sq. kms. Altitude(in meters) 2,240 1,858 1,984 Temperature Max. Min. Summer : 25.0�C 10.0�C Winter : 21.0�C 0�C Rainfall 121 cms Population 81,763 48,003 38,121 Season April to June and September to November Clothing Heavy woollen in Winter; Light woollen in Summer. Languages spoken Tamil, Kannada, Malayalam

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