Champawat
5
(1 Review)
contact agent
enquire now
About Champawat
Champawat is a town and a Nagar Palika Parishad in Champawat area in the domain of Uttarakhand, India. It is the administrative headquater of Champawat area. The city was the past capital of the Kumaon Kingdom. Champawat is acknowledged to be the place the Kurmavtar took place these days. There is a temple called Kranteshwar Mandir, which is dedicated to ruler Shiva. It is in like manner assumed that the head of 'fell here after he kicked the basin in battle the of Mahabharata. The Gahtku Mandir is the haven focused on Ghatotkacha. Champawat was once in the past the capital of the Chand convention pioneers of Kumaon. The Baleshwar Temple built by the Chand rulers in the twelfth century is an awesome milestone with splendid stone cutting works.
There is a famous temple Shaani Mandir in Maurari Village. Champawat has a Humid subtropical climate with unquestionable wet and dry seasons. Due to its skyscraper, Champawat regularly acknowledges a more straightforward air reliably. As a result of its cooler temperatures Champawat is a pervasive conductor for voyagers visiting Pithoragarh, Dharchula, Almora and other mountain towns. The long winding settled avenues making ready to Champawat through Tanakpur are a predominant course for bicycle enthusiasts. Champawat has arious hotels and guesthouses for individuals visiting the town. Bal Mithai of Champawat is mainstream for its unique taste.
enquire now
Champawat Rating & Reviews
5/5
Excellent
(1 Ratings and 1 Reviews)
Excellent
1
Very Good
0
Average
0
Poor
0
Terrible
0
1 Reviews - Showing 1 to 1

Krishanu roy
16 Oct 2017 01:02 PM
We had 1 night stay each time on our journey to/from Munsyari in June 2015. It is at 5000 ft altitude but in a valley. Fairly spread out town as per bill standard. No good hotel to stay except one which was newly built but didn't have boarding facility.A temple complex of Baleshwar dynasty was worth visiting though it is in advanced stage of decay, situated in the centre of town sandwiched between domestic houses.