In the bush since 2014

Where the wild things are

Small-group safaris designed by naturalists. Tiger trackers in Ranthambore. Lion pride specialists in the Mara. Leopards, elephants, the quiet birds you've never heard of.

28National parks
142Naturalists on call
4.9★Across 600 trips
100%Eco-certified lodges
Featured parks

Where you'll go

Curated by region, designed by season. Each itinerary is built around the animal you most want to see — and the photographer or naturalist you'll travel with.

Top tigers
India · Rajasthan

Ranthambore

Tiger paradise meets Mughal ruins

Zones 2, 3 and 4 with our resident tracker Mohan, who has logged over 1,200 tiger sightings. Stay at Sherbagh tented camp.

₹78,0004 nights, 6 game drives
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Big 5
Kenya · Masai Mara

Masai Mara

The Great Migration corridor

July through October: river crossings at Mara River. Premium camps with guides who've worked in the Mara for 20+ years.

₹3,80,0007 nights, all-inclusive
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Leopards
India · Karnataka

Bandipur & Kabini

Asia's leopard capital

Dawn drives at Kabini's backwaters. Hosts include wildlife photographers Kalyan Varma's recommended trackers. Black panther sightings most months.

₹62,0003 nights, lodge stay
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Elephants
Botswana · Okavango

Okavango Delta

Africa's last great wilderness

Mokoro canoe safaris through papyrus channels. Elephant herds at Chobe. Night drives where civets and aardwolves still wander. Bush-charter included.

₹5,40,0009 nights, 3 camps
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Code of conduct

How we travel

Four rules we won't break, no matter what.

Eco-certified only

Every lodge we book holds ITC, GSTC or Travel +Leisure Conscious certification. We audit annually.

Max 6 per jeep

Even when parks allow 8. Better photography angles, less stress on animals, deeper conversations with the naturalist.

No baiting, ever

We don't tip drivers to chase, and we walk away from operators that bait sightings. The wild is on its own terms.

2% to conservation

Of every safari fee, 2% is contributed to verified field projects — Wildlife SOS, BNHS, Big Cat Initiative.

From the field journal

What guests carry home

"On day three, after we'd given up, a male tiger sauntered out of the lantana right in front of the jeep. The driver killed the engine. For four minutes, nobody breathed. Then he turned and looked at us. That's the trip I'll talk about for the rest of my life."

— Anita Subramanian · Tadoba, March 2025

Tell us what you want to see

We'll design the trip around the animal — and the photographer — that matters most to you.