Monday, 27 June 2011

Districts


Travel

How to Reach Shimla:

Air: The airport in Shimla is 22 kms away from Shimla in Jabarhatti. It is connected to all major cities in India as well as abroad.

Rail: Shimla has a meter gauge railway station. It is connected to the nearest broad gauge station in Kalka, located 96 kms from Shimla.

Bus: Himachal Pradesh Road Transport Corporation (HPRTC) buses provide bus connectivity from all cities in Himachal Pradesh to Shimla. The ordinary and deluxe bus services are available from Delhi to Shimla.

Bus tickets are easily available online. One can plan trip and do bus booking online in advance. Online bus tickets booking is an easy process which can save your time and price.

Shimla to delhi

State Profile


Culture


Geography and climate


The Himalaya constitutes the highest mountain system of the world. There is great diversification in the climatic conditions of Himachal due to variation in elevation (450-6500mtrs). It varies from hot and sub-humid tropical (450-900mtrs) in the southern Low tracts, warm and temperate (900-1800mtrs), cool and temperate (1900-2400mtrs) and cold alpine and glacial (2400-4800mtrs) in the northern and eastern high mountain ranges.


There are three main seasons in Himachal Pradesh :

1.
Cold - October to February
2.
Hot - March to June
3.
Rainy - July to September

By October, nights and mornings are very cold. Snowfall at elevations of about 3000mtrs is about 3mtrs and lasts from December to March. About 4500mtrs, is perpetual snow. The main season is the spring from mid- Feb to March-April. The air is cool and fresh. Colourful flowers adorn the valleys, forest slopes and meadows. In the hill stations, the climate is pleasant and comfortable.The rains start at the end of June. The entire landscape becomes green and fresh. Streams begin to swell and springs are replenished. The heavy rains in July and August cause damage to erosion, floods and landslides.
Dharamshala has the highest rainfall of 3400mm. Spiti is the driest area (below 50mm rainfall) being enclosed by high mountains on all sides.


Particulars and characteristics of each zone :

Particulars and Characteristics
Sub Himalayan or Outer Shivalik Zone
Lower Himalayan Ranges or Mid-Hill Zone
Higher Himalayan Ranges or High hill Zone
Cold Himalayan zone
or Trance-Himalayan Zone
Altitude
Upto 800 meters
800 to 1,600 meters
1,600 to 2,700 meters
1,600 to 3,600
Type of Area
Valley areas and foot hills
Hilly and Mountain ranges
Alpine zone
Lahaul Spiti and Kinnaur range
Climate Conditions
Sub tropical
Slight warm temperature
Cool temperature with humidity
Dry and Cold temperature (Mostly snowy area)
Rainfall ( in mm. )
1,500 mm
1,500 to 3,000 mm
1,000 to 1,500 mm
500 mm
% of total geographical area
30 %
10 %
25 %
35 %
% of total cultivated area
55 %
30 %
10 %
5 %
Important Crops
Wheat, paddy, maize, gram, sugarcane, mustard, vegetables, potato. (Rainfed, partially irrigated)
Wheat, pulses, barley, maize, paddy, ginger, vegetables. (Rainfed, partially irrigated)
Wheat, barley, buck wheat, millets, quality seed, temperature vegetables, potato. (Rainfed, partially irrigated)
Temperature vegetables, Europian vegetables, wheat, barley buck wheat, amanthus, quality seed potato. (mostly irrigated)
Fruits
Guava, citrus, litchi, mango etc
Plum apricot, peaches, walnut, pomegranate, pears etc
Chest nut, walnut, apples, cherry etc
Grapes, prunes, grapes, raisin, chilgoza, varities (dry) of apricot etc













Government


History


About Himachal Pradesh

himachalpradeshguid