Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Ram Jhula is also a connecting bridge between Sivananda Ashram located in Muni Ki Reti to Gita Bhawan, Parmarth Niketan and other temples located in Swargashram. Though similar in design, this bridge is bigger than Lakshman Jhula, which is 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) up the river. [2] This bridge is constructed with a span of 750 feet (230 m).
The Ram Jhula and Lakshman Jhula suspension bridges are accompanied by temples with additional ashrams near Swargashram along the eastern riverbank. Neelkanth Mahadev Temple is located in the forest, 28 km (17 mi) from Rishikesh, while Vashishtha Guha, a cave used by the sage Vashishtha, is 21 km (13 mi) north of the area. [44] [45]
The Ram Jhula consists of two parallel cable-stayed railway over-bridges in Nagpur, India. [1] The 606.74 metres (1,990.6 ft) long bridge crosses the railway tracks north of Nagpur Junction railway station. The Blue Line of the Nagpur Metro runs along the centre of the bridge on the eastern side. [2]
Jhula is a village development committee in Western Rukum District in Karnali Province of western Nepal. At the time of the 2011 Nepal census it had a population of 3334 people living in 686 individual households. Jhula or, Jhula-pul, also translates into "bridge" or "suspension bridge" in Hindi language. (2)
Girls swinging on Raja swing. Raja Parba (Odia: ରଜ ପର୍ବ, pronounced [ɾɔdʒɔ pɔɾbɔ]), also known as Mithuna Sankranti, is a three-day-long festival of womanhood celebrated in Odisha, India.
Ciara Brascom, 39, painted a squirt gun black and brought it with her to the TD Bank on Route 206 back on July 28, 2024, according a statement from the United States Attorney's Office.
The Jhula Devi temple is situated at a distance of 7 kilometres (4 mi) from the town of Ranikhet near Chaubatia. The temple is dedicated to Maa Durga , who is believed to have protected the villagers from wild animals, leopards and tigers, that roamed in the dense jungles around the temple.
View of Jonk, the village on the eastern side of Lakshman Jhula footbridge. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi leased the site from the state forestry department of Uttar Pradesh in 1961. [1] It sits on a 150 feet (46 m)-high cliff overlooking the Ganges river, on a hill known as Manikoot, and comprises 14 acres (57,000 m 2) of land surrounded by jungle. [1]