Day 01 - Puri - Konark
1) Ramchandi temple
2) Chandravaga Sea beach
3) Sun temple Konark
4) Jagannath Temple
Day 02 - Puri - Chilika Lake
1) Chilika lake (boating)
2) Dolphin
3) Sea mouth
4) Nalaban bird sanctuary
5) Alaranath temple
Day 03 - Puri - Bhubaneswar
1) Dhauligiri
2) Khandagiri
3) Udaygiri
4) Rajarani temple
5) Kedargouri temple
6) Ram temple
7) Nandankanan Zoo
Konark Sun Temple The Konark Sun Temple (also spelled Konarak) is a 13th-century Hindu temple dedicated to the sun god. Shaped like a giant chariot, the temple is known for the exquisite stone carvings that cover the entire structure. The Konark Sun Temple is the most popular tourist destination in Orissa and has been a World Heritage Site since 1984. It is located in the village of Konark, which is 35km north of Puri on the coast of the Bay of Bengal.
Jagannath Temple The temple is an important pilgrimage destination for many Hindu traditions, particularly worshippers of Krishna and Vishnu, and part of the Char Dham pilgrimages that a Hindu is expected to make in one's lifetime.It shows a Light of immortality owned against the powers of negation, that the universal spirit adopted whole Oriya society. Spiritual Significance and Jagannath culture transfers the tourist from abroad.
Chilika lake Chilka Lake - Asia's largest brackish water lagoon with water spread ranging from 1165 sq km m the rainy season to 906 sq km in the dry season is nestled in the heart of the coastal Odisha (Orissa). It extends from Bhusandpur in Puri district in the North to Rambha-Malud in Ganjan district in the South, separated from the Bay of Bengal by a 60 km long narrow strip of marshy islands and sand-flats.
The Nandankanan Zoo, just outside Bhubaneswar, has the world's largest "collection" of white tigers, a mutation almost always the result of close relatives breeding, now mostly in captivity. They're not albinos, as their black (or chocolate brown) stripes indicate. Among the other effects of the recessive gene that gives them white rather than orange fur are: 1) They're always cross-eyed. 2) They're larger than their "normal" tigers.