Ranthambore: Tigers and Glamping
May is the best month for tiger spotting, as the large cats are often seen seeking water and shade.
An Online Magazine from the Asia Travel Experts at Remote Lands
May is the best month for tiger spotting, as the large cats are often seen seeking water and shade.
We could all use a little Asia wildlife, from the snow leopards of India and rhinos of Nepal to the orangutans Borneo and the birds of paradise in Papua New Guinea.
Things at Kanha are laid back; finding a tiger isn’t as important as enjoying the sunsets on the dusty roads and forests teeming with deer and birds.
Travelogues journeys to Nepal’s Chitwan National Park where deer, rare birds, and tigers mingle with the one-horned rhinos in a jungle fed by the ice of the Himalayas.
Found almost a hundred miles from the nearest port, the diving hotspot of Tubbataha in the Philippines is under-traveled and teaming with life.
Of the few remaining habitats left of the orangutans, Bukit Lawang inside Gunung Leuser National Park is the best known, a place for seeing and saving the red ape of Sumatra.
Summer is on the way, and for luxury travelers to Asia, that means one thing: Indonesia. The weather is right and the water is clear, so this exclusively Indonesia issue has a look at the best spots on the 18,000 islands.
Madhya Pradesh is a growing India destination for history and nature lovers, and there are some pretty swank places to stay.
In Kanha, Rudyard Kipling’s imagination is still alive, a land where tigers, bears, and all manner of jungle beast roam the tracts of India.
Through jungle to a smoldering caldera, Mount Kerinci provides a challenging two-day hike up a volcano towering over Sumatra.
Just because one is traipsing around the wilds of Ranthambore looking for tigers is no reason to forego luxury.
In Gujarat, there is a place where gear heads can ride on India’s roads in antique cars from the early 20th century.