9 Islands in India to visit That are Never crowded at any time

 Agatti Island, Lakshadweep

                                             source: Flickr - Binu K S

Agatti Island is amazing, The most striking feature of the islands is they have serene blue lagoon and crystal clear water around them and is fringed by snow white coral sands. The Islands are formed from the depth of the sea due to the calcareous secretions of polyp colony and, therefore, the islands are atolls in their origin. The Corals, crystal clear water and the rich marine flora and fauna enhance the mystique of these islands. 

 Kadmat Island

                                  
                                          source: flickr - cprogrammer

Kadmat Island, also known as Cardamom Island, is an island belonging to the Amindivi subgroup of islands of the Lakshadweep archipelago in India.

 Kavaratti Island

                                 source: flickr - Mike Prince

Kavaratti is the capital of the Union Territory of Lakshadweep in India. Kavaratti is a census town as well as the name of the atoll upon which the town stands

Bangaram Island

                                 Source:Wikipedia.org

Bangaram is an atoll in the Union Territory of Lakshadweep, India. The atoll has a roughly rectangular shape and is 8.1 km in length with a maximum width of 4.2 km. It is located over 400 km off Kochi in the Indian Ocean.

 Port Blair

                                  source: flickr - Joseph Jayanth

Port Blair is the largest town and a municipal council in Andaman district in the Andaman Islands and the capital of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, a union territory of India.

Havelock Island



                                  source: flickr - Sankara Subramanian

Havelock Island, with an area of 113.93 km², is the largest of the islands that comprise Ritchie's Archipelago, a chain of islands to the east of Great Andaman in the Andaman Islands.


Neil Island

                                  source: flickr - New Delhices

Neil Island is an island in the Andaman Islands of India, located in Ritchie's Archipelago. It is apparently named after James George Smith Neill, a British soldier who had sternly dealt with the insurgents during the suppression of the 1857 Mutiny


Ross Island


                                  source: yourtourinfo.blogspot.com

Ross Island is one of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands, about 2 km east of Port Blair. It was the Administrative Headquarters for the islands, before an earthquake rocked it in 1941. The headquarters were then shifted to Port Blair .

minicoy island


                                 Source:Google

Minicoy, locally known as Maliku is the southernmost atoll of the archipelago of Lakshadweep, India. Administratively, it is a census town in the Indian union territory of Lakshadweep.


Incredible way to get food from Lions most shocking video




         

Most Poisonous Frogs in The Planet

Poison frogs are known as the jewels of the rain forest and come in just about every color combination you can think of: red and black, yellow and green, orange and silver, blue and yellow, green and black, pink and silver. Their sparkling colors, however, are not for beauty but for warning: “Hey! Here I am, and I am poisonous.

Some Of the poisonous frogs in this Planet are


  1. Golden Poison Frog

Size: Smaller than Normal

Toxin Rate: consisting of highest toxins 

Toxin Type: batrachotoxin 

Toxin Range: Kills up to 10 humans or Two big African Bulls

Causes: kills by blocking the body’s nerve impulses, contracting the muscles, and ultimately causing heart failure


Uses: poison arrows, the arrow tips stay deadly toxic for up to two years.


  2.Black-legged Dart Frog


Size: smaller than Phyllobates terribilis

Toxins Rate:The second most toxic frog on Earth

Causes:fevers, excruciating pain, seizures and, ultimately, death by respiratory and muscular paralysis

Uses: Medicine


 3. Kokoe Poison Dart Frog (Phyllobates aurotaenia)

Size: Very Small

Toxins type :batrachotoxin

Family: Dendrobatidae

Founded:1913 by George Albert Boulenger (Zoologist)

Causes: unbearable pain and fever to seizures and paralysis


 4. Phantasmal Poison Frog


Size:Half an inch in some cases

Toxins Rate:High

Causes:Human & predator death

Uses:Used as a medicine

 5. Splash-backed Poison Frog

Size: Very Small

Toxin Rate: High

Causes: Human death

Capacity: Kills up to 5 humans

 6.Golfodulcean Poison Frog


Size: Too samll

Toxin Rate: fourth most toxic of the Phyllobates genus

Causes: excruciating pain, mild seizures, and even paralysis in some cases.

 
7.Lovely Poison Frog



Name: striped poison dart frog.
Size: Too Samll

Toxin Rate: America’s lovely poison frog is the least toxic in the Phyllobates                           genus.
 
toxin Range:From nothing to 0.8 micrograms

Causes:  heart failure in predators that risk eating it.

 8.Blue Poison Dart Frog


Size: Small

Toxin Rate: Not t The blue poison dart frog’s poison can paralyze or kill any                           predator not warned away by its coloring, and could even potentially                     prove deadly to a human.


Toxin Range: 2 micro grams

Causes: Predators death when eat.

 9.Strawberry Poison Dart Frog


Size: Small

Toxin Rate: some what less than other Phyllobates genus of poison dart frogs

Causes: swelling and a burning sensation.


 10.Red-backed Poison Frog



Size: Small

Toxin Rate: The second most poisonous frog in its genus, after the splash-backed                     poison frog.

Causes:Death of Predators and small species like chickens .

                      These are some of the most poisonous frogs among the world we are trying to update this list as soon as possible (if we found any new one we can update that specie details).So Stay connected to us!!!
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Worlds Top 10 Wildest Places To Survive

We live in a wonderful world that is full of beauty, charm and adventure. There is no end to the adventures that we can have if only we seek them with our eyes open.

Our world not only consisting beauty an adventure but also consisting of some Wildest Places to live 

we can not survive on that places without any experience. The list those places are


10.The Briny Deep


It's astounding that with everything humans have done to inhabited a lot of the landmass on the planet, about 70% of it remains uninhabited because it is water. The oceans, vast and seemingly limitless, are an innerspace full of many things that we probably don't even know about yet. It's taken centuries for humans to actually explore the deepest part of the ocean, Mariana's Trench, and we only saw a mere fraction of it. There's a whole wild world within our world, yet to be explored-or remain untouched?

9.Papua New Guinea



Papua New Guinea officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is an Oceanian country that occupies the eastern half of the island of New Guinea
Papua New Guinea's environment is also its defense mechanism. Its rugged terrain of rolling volcanic hills and thick tropical rain forest have made it difficult for outside companies to exploit its natural resources. It's also made it hard to establish a transportation network, leaving the wilderness for the most part, undisturbed.

8.The Amazon



The Amazon River in South America is the largest river by discharge of water in the world, averaging a discharge of about 209,000 cubic meters per second

It it believed that the cures for many of mankind's diseases could be found in the Amazon Rainforest -- the world's largest -- which encompasses most of northern inland South America. Plenty of conservancies want to keep it this way, for the Amazon is under constant threat of deforestation for the timber industry and cattle ranching, amongst other consequences of progress.

7.The Gobi Desert





The Gobi is a large desert region in Asia. It covers parts of northern and northwestern China, and of southern Mongolia.

6.The Sahara



The Sahara may be the second largest desert in the world -- Antarctica, with only 2" of rain per year is technically the world's biggest desert but it certainly is the biggest one you think of when you conventionally think about the desert ecosystem. With 3.5 million square miles of barren land full of wind-carved sand dunes, it brings forth daytime heatwaves and harsh dry conditions unappealing to most civilizations; it's wild because most people couldn't live there.

5.Antarctica


Antarctica, on average, is the coldest, driest, and windiest continent, and has the highest average elevation of all the continents

Being on the bottom of the world brings forth the coldest, windiest, and driest conditions on the planet. It's no wonder most of it is untouched by man. Besides a few research bases scattered sparsely around the icy continent, Antarctica is virtually uninhabited -- except by the iconic penguins of course, who might want to leave themselves if only they had the ability to fly -- and if they hadn't been adapted for the extreme conditions already.

4.Seychelles



The Seychelles may be a well-sought out islands beach destination, but tourism hasn't completed tainted them. In fact, this archipelago nation in the Indian Ocean has the largest percentage of land under conservation by law, of any country in the world -- about 50 percent -- which is good news for the over 2,000 endemic species that live there.

3.The Galapagos




Tourism may be a huge draw to this Ecuadorian archipelago in the Pacific, but a lot of money collected here goes towards the conservation of its numerous islands-land its wildlife. It is here that animal species are specialized on each island's unique environments -- including marine iguanas, blue-footed boobies, and frigatebirds -- that research about them became an integral part of Darwin's Theory of Evolution

2.Siberia



Large areas of Siberia's taiga have been harvested for lumber since the collapse of the Soviet Union.


Above the 50th parallel on the other side of the world lies Siberia, a place almost synonymous with desolation. Like the Canadian North, this wild expanse is also mostly comprised of taiga forest on former glaciated territory -- areas that are blanketed white during harsh, long winters.

1.Northern Territories of Canada




Sparsely populated mostly by people of native North American Indian and Inuit descent, Canada's three northern territories -- Yukon, Northwest Territories, and Nunavut -- still retain lifestyles before European colonization of the New World. Sure there is a Western influence, but locals still fish, hunt, and gather in the pristine, forested wilderness as they have been for centuries.


These are some of the most wildest places to survive.

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