These rates shall not be posted or published in any promotional material or brochures.
The rates should not be in any way be accessible on the Internet. Rates are subject to revision in case of change in government policy or change in park entrance fee structure etc.
We reserve the right to modify or change the special rates offered based on exceptional circumstances.
Bookings unless guaranteed by advance payment will be considered TENTATIVE. Management may release the booking without giving any notice, if payment is not received. Full advance must be received 45 Days before check in.
25% deposit on reservation, balance 45 days prior to arrival.
GIT rates will be valid from 10 paying pax onwards.
On 15 paying pax, One bonafide Tour Leader will be complimentary.
On 10 paying pax, Tour Leader will be at 50% discount.
Agent Voucher must be received by our office:
FIT – 30 DAYS in advance.
GIT – 45 DAYS In advance. Final Names and Rooming List should reach us at least 30 days before arrival.
If the voucher or advance payment is not received the reservation will be cancelled.
For a Room Block of over 12 and above, one night advance deposit is required at the time of making the booking, failing which Management reserves the right to release the Booking.
This deposit is NON REFUNDABLE and NON TRANSFERABLE to another group.
All bookings must be routed through our Delhi Office, failing which hotel will charge Published Tariff.
It’s 50 years since Kailash Sankhala took the helm at India’s Project Tiger - and his family wildlife lodge is still doing a roaring trade, finds Tamara Hinson. MTEN minutes into a stroll along Bandhavgarh National Park’s boundary when I start questioning my keenness to see the wildlife. My companion is naturalist Simranjit, whose stories amuse and terrify in equal parts. He chuckles when he realises I mistook the flimsy fence for some kind of barrier.
Alarm calls from monkeys grew increasingly shrill, the shrieks of peacocks ever louder. The jungle was on red alert. Such animal warnings about predators are just what you want to hear if you’re searching for a big cat in India: in this drum roll of agitation, our 4x4 rounded a corner and came to an abrupt halt. In front of us, a tiger had stepped out of the undergrowth.
Poner Singh is a stubborn man. When India’s National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) invited him to swap his hand-to-mouth existence in the teak forests of the Satpura Tiger Reserve for a free house and five acres of farmland on the outside, the father of two declined.
Sankhala is certain I’ll see a tiger. He tells me this as we bump along the dirt roads of Bandhavgarh National Park, India’s tiger country – 1,540km2 of swaying grassland and tropical forest where the mighty Bengal tiger roams freely.
Tamara Hinson heads to Bandhavgarh National Park, one of India’s best conservation success stories, in search of big cats.
From the moment I enter Bandhavgarh National Park, it’s clear the wildlife is never far away.