Bird walk at Van Vihar National Park, Bhopal
- Bhopal
- 7 December, 2025
- Kritalee Chindarkar
About Van Vihar National Park
Van Vihar National Park in Bhopal stretches along the shimmering edge of Upper Lake, where forested hills roll gently into water and city noise dissolves into birdsong. Though compact in size, the park feels like a green amphitheatre—dry deciduous woodland, rocky slopes, quiet grass patches, and lakefront marshes all folding into one another. Visitors wandering its cycling paths often feel the city fall away behind them, replaced by spotted deer grazing in the shade, wild boar rustling through leaf litter, and raptors circling lazily above the lake’s silver skin. Its unique model—part zoo, part free-ranging wildlife sanctuary—creates a landscape where rescued animals find safe refuge and wild species move freely across the terrain.
For nature lovers and birdwatchers, Van Vihar is a dependable haven. The lake’s edge draws herons, cormorants, storks, and winter ducks, while the forest hosts barbets, parakeets, drongos, peafowl, and a chorus of woodland songbirds. Morning walkers often witness the slow unfurling of the park’s rhythm—the sun easing over the hills, langurs leaping between branches, and the air turning alive with calls from tree and water alike. As Bhopal expands, Van Vihar remains a breathing space for both wildlife and people, reminding the city that its most treasured calm still comes from these protected pockets of green.
Partnered with

Bird Guide - Kritalee Chindarkar
She is the Founder of the Tarang Eco Tours where they organize nature trails and camps focused on sustainable tourism and to create environmental awareness among people.
Bird walk Location
Common birds of Van Vihar National Park
With 264 species recorded, Van Vihar National Park offers a dazzling blend of lake-loving birds, woodland regulars, and open-country specialists. Along the water’s edge, watchers frequently spot Black-winged Stilts, Bronze-winged Jacanas, Purple Swamphens, White-breasted Waterhens, Moorhens, Spot-billed Ducks, and an elegant lineup of herons and egrets—from Pond Heron to Grey Heron, Black-crowned Night Heron, Little Egret, and Great Egret. The tree-lined paths stay lively with Purple Sunbirds, Coppersmith Barbets, Rose-ringed Parakeets, Common Ioras, Cinerous Tits, Jungle Babblers, White-browed Fantails, and the yellow flare of the Golden Oriole. Open patches draw Green Bee-eaters, Indian Robins, Oriental Magpie Robins, Ashy and Plain Prinias, while raptors like the Shikra keep a quiet watch overhead. Add in Indian Peafowl, Woolly-necked Storks, Red-vented Bulbuls, Spotted Doves, Large-billed Crows, Baya Weavers, and two striking kingfishers—the White-throated and Common—and Van Vihar becomes a richly layered theatre of birdlife all year round.

Asian Openbill

Asian Green Bee-eater

Black-headed Ibis

Baya Weaver

Yellow-footed Green Pigeon

Coppersmith Barbet

House Crow

Ashy Prinia

Asian Openbill

Lesser Whistling Duck

Paddyfield Pipit

Oriental Magpie Robin

Grey-headed Swamphen

Grey-backed Shrike

Black Drongo

Indian Golden Oriole

Eurasian Collared Dove

Red-wattled Lapwing

Pheasant-tailed Jacana

Indian Spot-billed Duck
Summary of Walk
The bird walk at Van Vihar National Park, Bhopal, led by Kritalee Chindarkar under Tarang Ecotours, brought together 12 bird enthusiasts for a refreshing morning in the park’s lush green forest trails. The group recorded 40+ bird species, with exciting highlights that included several winter migrants such as Siberian Stonechat, Eurasian Wryneck, Red Avadavat, Common Redstart, Western Marsh Harrier, Verditer Flycatcher, and Red-breasted Flycatcher. Woodland sightings offered additional delights with species like the Clamorous Reed Warbler (Indian Great Reed Warbler), Hume’s Warbler, Black-rumped Flameback, and Indian Peafowl. As the walk transitioned into the wetland zones, participants enjoyed beautiful encounters with Indian Pond Heron, Pied Kingfisher, White-breasted Waterhen, Bronze-winged Jacana with well-camouflaged chicks, and nesting Grey Herons, Great Cormorants, and Little Cormorants.
For some participants, this walk marked a joyful return to their long-lost hobby of birdwatching, making every call and flutter even more meaningful. Kritalee enriched the experience with fascinating insights into bird behaviour, migration stories, and ecological interactions, creating an atmosphere of learning and appreciation. Surrounded by the sounds and colours of nature, the morning became one of reflection, discovery, and shared wonder—an experience that left all participants inspired and rejuvenated.
Number of Participants
0
