After Breakfast, Checkout and proceed to Bhedaghat. Enjoy the boating between colored Marble Rock and Visit Dhaundhar Fall with Rope way. Later transfer to Amarkantak. Check in to the Hotel and Relax. Night stay in Amarkantak.
Bhedaghat: Bhedaghat is famous for the high marble rocks making a valley through which river Narmada flows. The place also has a beautiful waterfall, known as Dhuandhar Falls (literally meaning a stream of smoke, because of its appearance)
Marble Rock: The Marble Rocks are a gorge along part of the Narmada River’s, creating a beautiful gorge of about 8 km in length. the gorge was narrow in size and hence, monkeys could cross over from one side to another. This gave the gorge its local name- Bandar Kudni (meaning monkeys' jumping place). The white marbles are predominantly rich in magnesium and are closer in hardness to soapstone.
Dhuandhar Falls: The word 'Dhuandhar' is derived from two Hindi words - Dhuan (smoke) and Dhar (flow), meaning a waterfall where one can feel a smoky atmosphere (this smoke is formed by water vapour or the smoke cascade). The Dhuandhar Falls is located on the Narmada River and are 30 meters high. The Narmada River, making its way through the world-famous Marble Rocks, narrows down and then plunges into a waterfall known as Dhuandhar.
Note: Amarkantak is a hill station. It is located amidst the Vindhya and Satpura mountain ranges in Madhya Pradesh
Amarkantak is known as the king of pilgrimages, or Tirthraj, because the town has many temples and holy places. It is narrated in the Hindu scriptures like the Puranas that Amarkantak is the place where celestial beings, sages and others obtained spiritual powers.The Amarkantak region is also a unique natural heritage area and is the meeting point of the Vindhya and the Satpura Ranges, with the Maikal Hills being the fulcrum. This is where the Narmada River, the Son River and Johilla River (tributary of Son) originate.15th-century Indian mystic and poet Kabir is said to have meditated on Kabir Chabutra, located in the town of Amarkantak, and is also called the platform of Kabir.