So meet this 83-year-old woman, who has been doing just that. This is Chatri Devi, who’s been living in the Great Himalayan National Park alone, all by herself.
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She doesn’t have electricity or a phone. She doesn’t even possess a clock and calculates time by the following the sun. This seclusion, complete isolation and wild animals do not scare her at all. Leopards and black bears do come near my house, even with their cubs, but they never attacked me as I am not their prey. Why should I be afraid of them? They go on their way (pointing towards a thick forest adjoining her house), she says. [caption id="attachment_5040" align="aligncenter" width="725"]Home to immense flora and fauna, the Great National Himalayan Park that is recognised by UNESCO for its incredibly rich bio-diversity.
The park is 754 square kilometres big, has 31 mammal species including leopards, the Himalayan black and brown bear, and the ghost cat – snow leopards. It also has over 300 bird species, reptiles, hundreds of insect species amid rich Himalayan flora and fauna.Read more: 7 Facts About The Himalayas You Never Knew
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