For Immediate Release
                                    
                                    Wild Planet Adventures Reveals Eight Epic, 
                                    Virtually Unknown Wildlife Parks to Visit Before You Die
                                     
                                    SAUSALITO, CA, April 11, 2013 -- Wildlife viewing specialist Wild Planet Adventures 
http://www.wildplanetadventures.com/ recommends eight of the world’s most extraordinary yet little-known wildlife parks for nature lovers’ bucket lists.
                                     
                                    “These parks are in some instances as endangered as the animals and  flora/fauna they harbor,” said Josh Cohen, company director. His  company, founded in 1991, supports wild and remote places where  travelers can fulfill lifetime dreams of seeing rare and endangered  species in natural habitats.
                                     
                                    Here are eight little-known but extraordinary parks Cohen recommends:  
                                     
                                    

1) 
Bokeo Nature Preserve, Laos  – Accessible only by an exhilarating network of zip-lines, this is  among the few places in the world where lodging is in a tree-house 200  feet high in the rainforest canopy.  Here gibbons sing love duets each  morning as the mist burns off the rainforest.  Bokeo can be combined  with Thailand’s little-known parks, Kaeng Krachan and Klong Seang  Wildlife Sanctuary for tracking wild elephants, clouded leopards, flying  fox and more.  
Thailand & Laos Ultimate Wildlife Eco-Tour
                                     
                                    
2)
 Manu Biosphere Reserve, Peru  – For biodiversity, this is the #1 park in the world, with an  astounding 200 species of mammals. Its 13 species of primates include  the pygmy marmoset, the world’s smallest primate, and the exotic  mustachioed Emperor Tamarin.  Fewer than 3,000 visitors annually enter  the coveted Reserved Zone, one of the most pristine rainforests on  earth.  
                                    
Peru Ultimate Wildlife Adventure
                                     
                                    3) 
Kafue National Park, Zambia – This  country’s “secret” park holds possibly the greatest diversity of  wildlife of any national park in Africa, according to Zambia’s tourism  board. Prides of lions 20 strong and cheetah are among 158 species of  animals in a region four times the size of nearby South Luangwa N.P. yet  with less than 10 percent of the tourism. For the most comprehensive,  crowd-free safari anywhere in Africa see 
Zambia Ultimate Wildlife Safari.
                                     
                                    

4) 
Manas and Kaziranga National Parks, Assam, India –  Both are UNESCO World Heritage Sites in India’s least visited region  between Bangladesh, Bhutan, Nepal, Myanmar, Tibet and China.  Kaziranga  offers a safari experience unparalleled outside of Africa, said Cohen.  “Imagine 40 rhinos, a few herds of wild elephants, a tiger and hundreds  of deer and other large mammals, all in your field of vision all at  once.”  Manas, with breathtaking views of the Himalayas, offers a  Project Tiger Reserve, an Elephant Reserve and a Biosphere Reserve.  Fewer than 6,000 foreigners come to Kaziranga annually. 
India Ultimate Wildlife Eco-Tour
                                     
                                    5) 
Danum Valley Conservation Area, Borneo –  While much of Borneo is loosing the battle against encroaching palm  plantations, Danum Valley’s rainforest is so thick it has never been  populated by humans. Known for its extreme biodiversity, the valley is  home to the full range of Sabah's lowland fauna sheltering the rare  Sumatran Rhinoceros, Pygmy Elephants, Clouded Leopards, and Orang Utans.  
Borneo Weird and Wonderful Wildlife
                                     
                                    
6) 
Kaeng Krachan National Park and Klong Seang Wildlife Sanctuary, Thailand –  Kaeng Krachan is Thailand’s largest and least visited park with only  one road in, usually on foot and 4WD for spotting wild elephant and  more. The lakeside wildlife sanctuary of Klong Seang features hundreds  of inlets and coves best explored through a combination of long-tail  boat and silent kayaking, offered exclusively Wild Planet Adventures,  the only US operator in the park. Sumatran tigers have been sighted  here; Wild Planet’s guests have seen the extremely rare Clouded Leopard  here. Unknown and nearly inaccessible, a new floating aqua-lodge on the  lake makes an ideal base near breathtaking limestone karst formations. 
Hidden Thailand
                                     
                                    7) 
Coiba Island Marine Wildlife Sanctuary –  An archipelago of 38 islands three hours off Panama’s Pacific Coast  offers a barrier reef considered among the top 10 dive spots in the  world, the largest protected marine wildlife sanctuary in the Americas  and a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Encounters with four species of whales  and others are both common and spectacular. Coiba also has its own  endemic sub-species of scarlet macaws, and its beaches are a regular  nesting site for green turtles. 
Panama – Coiba Island Diving
                                     
                                    
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