Where Wild Chitwan Speaks to Your Soul
Real jungle. Real wildlife. Real local guides. Led by Krishna Pariyar — born and raised inside Chitwan National Park — we offer authentic safaris that no resort or travel agency can replicate.






Six Ways to Experience Chitwan
Every safari is guided by born-and-raised locals. No package tours. No middlemen. You get the real Chitwan — on foot, by jeep, by canoe, or under the stars.
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Not a Tour Company. A Family of Guides.
Chitwan's Wild Residents
Bengal Tiger
One-Horned Rhino
Marsh Crocodile
Spotted Deer
Indian Peacock
Wild Elephant
500+ Bird Species
Langur Monkey
Sloth Bear
Gangetic Dolphin
Words From the Wild
10% of Every Booking
Goes to Conservation
We clean rivers, count tigers, survey birds, and train the next generation of Chitwan's nature guides. When you book with us, you invest in the jungle's future.
Participated
Surveyed
Training
The Jungle Is Waiting For You
Payment on arrival. No hidden fees. Real local guides. Direct booking. Let's plan your Chitwan adventure today.
About Us &
Krishna Pariyar
A life lived between the forest and the river — this is the story of Jungle Safari Tours.
Chitwan
National Park
Krishna Pariyar —
The Forest is His Home
Krishna Pariyar was born in 1981 in a small village inside what is now Chitwan National Park — one of Asia's greatest wildlife refuges. In those days, the forest was untouched. Villages were separated by kilometers of wild jungle. Homes were built from grass and bamboo. People lived entirely in harmony with nature: fishing in the rivers, collecting firewood, bartering skills and food.
Every night, families took turns sleeping in tall watchtowers to protect their crops from rhinos, deer, and wild elephants. Krishna grew up knowing the jungle not as a destination, but as a neighbour. He watched early tourists arrive in the 1990s and recognized something they could never buy from a guidebook: a life lived inside this ecosystem.
In 2007, Krishna founded Jungle Safari Tours — a local, community-owned safari operation built on one principle: the best guide is the one who was born here.
Win-Win for Everyone
We operate as a collective of local guides. Every guide in our network earns fairly from every booking. Tourists receive direct, authentic service. No agents. No commissions eaten by middlemen. No inflated prices. Just people who love the forest, sharing it honestly.
Our future plan is to develop proper homestays at each guide's family home — so guests can stay where the guides actually live, eat the food their families cook, and experience Chitwan from the inside out.
10% of all profits go to local skills training programs.
What We Will Never Sell
We believe wildlife exists to be observed — never exploited. For this reason, we have made a firm decision not to offer the following activities:
No elephant rides. Elephant riding causes significant suffering to captive elephants and is not something we will ever offer, regardless of tourist demand.
No horse cart village tours. We believe in walking or responsible jeep access — not using animals as transport for tourist convenience.
Yes to ethical wildlife observation. All our safaris maintain respectful distances from wildlife. Your guides are trained naturalists, not entertainers. The animals always come first.
Chitwan National Park
Nepal's first national park — a UNESCO World Heritage Site and one of Asia's finest wildlife reserves.
Asia's Premier Wildlife Sanctuary
History of Chitwan
The name "Chitwan" means "Heart of the Jungle" in Nepali. For centuries, this land in the Terai lowlands was home to the Tharu people, who had developed a natural immunity to malaria and lived sustainably within the forest ecosystem.
In the 19th century, the region became a royal hunting reserve for Nepal's Shah kings and their British guests. Tigers, rhinos, and crocodiles were hunted in staggering numbers. After Nepal opened to tourism in the 1950s, it became clear that conservation action was urgently needed.
In 1973, Chitwan was declared Nepal's first national park. In 1984, UNESCO designated it a World Heritage Site. Today, Chitwan is celebrated as one of Asia's greatest conservation success stories — with rhino and tiger populations significantly recovered from historic lows.
The Tharu People
The Tharu are the indigenous inhabitants of the Terai forests. They lived here for thousands of years before the park was established, developing deep ecological knowledge, unique cultural traditions, and a way of life perfectly adapted to the jungle's rhythms. Our Tharu Village tours honour and support this remarkable community.
Habitats & Ecosystems
Chitwan's landscape encompasses dense sal forests, tall elephant grass (some over 8 meters high), oxbow lakes, and the braided rivers of the Rapti and Narayani. This diversity of habitat supports an extraordinary range of wildlife:
- Bengal Tiger — apex predator and symbol of the park
- Greater One-Horned Rhinoceros — recovered from near-extinction
- Marsh Mugger and Gharial Crocodile — found in Rapti and Narayani rivers
- Wild Elephant, Leopard, Sloth Bear, Gaur (Indian Bison)
- Spotted Deer, Sambar, Barking Deer, Hog Deer
- 500+ bird species including Indian Roller, Giant Hornbill, Kingfisher
- Gangetic River Dolphin — rare and endangered
Best Time to Visit
October to March is the ideal season — dry weather, cooler temperatures, and thinning grass makes wildlife sightings more frequent. April to May is excellent for bird watching. June to September is monsoon season — the park is partially closed but the post-monsoon jungle is lush and green.
🌿 Local Tip from Krishna: The hours between 6am–9am and 4pm–6pm are the best times for wildlife activity. Our early morning walking safaris are specifically timed to maximise your chances of encounters.
Jungle Walking Safari
The most intimate way to experience Chitwan — on foot, with naturalist guides who were born here.
Walk Where Tigers Walk
Nothing compares to exploring the jungle on foot. No engine noise. No barriers. Just you, your guides, the forest floor, and whatever creatures choose to reveal themselves. This is the most authentic wildlife experience in Chitwan.
Your group will be led by a minimum of two trained naturalist guides — certified by Nepal's Department of National Parks. They read the jungle in real time: fresh footprints in the mud, a broken branch, a startled deer, the alarm call of a peacock — every sign tells a story.
Morning walks (starting around 6am) offer the highest chance of wildlife sightings. Afternoon walks (3pm start) are excellent for bird watching and golden hour photography.
What You Might Encounter
- One-Horned Rhinoceros — frequently seen near grassland edges
- Spotted Deer and Sambar in the sal forest
- Indian Peacock displaying in clearings
- Giant Hornbill, Kingfisher, and rare forest birds
- Tiger footprints, scrapes, and scat (tiger sightings are always possible)
- Crocodiles basking on river sandbanks
- Langur Monkeys and Rhesus Macaques in the canopy
Safety
All guides carry emergency communication equipment. Groups are kept small (maximum 8 people, split into two groups of 4). Our safety record over 18 years of guiding is impeccable. Your guides will brief you on safe wildlife behaviour before entering the park.
💰 Jungle Walking Safari — Prices
* All prices are per group, not per person. Groups of 6+ can choose to walk together or split into smaller groups. Park permit fees are charged separately per person by the park authority.
🦁 Special Combo: One Day Walking + Canoe Safari — Walk the jungle in the morning, then canoe the Rapti River in the afternoon. Ask us for a combined package quote.
Jeep Safari — Mission Tiger
Cover the full breadth of Chitwan's grasslands and forests in search of tigers, rhinos, and more.
The Hunt for The Tiger
Our signature "Mission Tiger" jeep safari takes you deep into the core zones of Chitwan National Park, covering terrain that would take days to cover on foot. Open 4x4 vehicles give you 360-degree sightlines over grasslands and riverbanks where large mammals frequently appear.
Your guide will direct the driver toward fresh tiger territory based on daily intelligence from rangers and morning tracking reports. While tiger sightings are never guaranteed in the wild, our guides' deep knowledge of animal movements gives you the best possible chance.
The jeep safari is also outstanding for rhino sightings, wild elephant herds, and the park's extraordinary birdlife — including the endangered Bengal Florican.
Jeep Safari Includes
- Certified naturalist guide throughout
- Open-top 4x4 jeep for unobstructed viewing
- Grassland routes, river crossings, and forest tracks
- Optional stop at Crocodile Breeding Centre (extra fee)
- Morning and afternoon route options available
Crocodile Breeding Centre
The government-run Gharial Conservation and Breeding Centre near Kasara is a fascinating addition to your jeep safari. Gharial crocodiles — one of the world's most endangered reptiles — are bred here and released into the Narayani River. Ask your guide to include it in your route.
🚙 Jeep Safari — Prices
* Reserved jeep is most comfortable for 6 people. Accommodates up to 10. Guide fee is additional if you book guide service with shared jeep. Park permits are charged by the park authority separately per person. Crocodile Breeding Centre entry fee is extra.
Canoe & Boat Safari
Drift silently along the Rapti River — where crocodiles sunbathe and kingfishers flash in the reeds.
Glide Into the Heart of the River
A canoe safari on the Rapti River is unlike any other wildlife experience. Traditional dugout wooden canoes — the same style used by Tharu fishermen for generations — carry you silently through one of the park's most wildlife-rich corridors.
From your low vantage point on the water, you experience the jungle at riverbank level — exactly as the animals do. Marsh mugger crocodiles rest metres away on sandbanks. Gharial crocodiles hang motionless in the shallows. Kingfishers, herons, and storks fish alongside you. Rhinos sometimes wade into the river to cool down, just meters from your canoe.
The Rapti also forms the northern boundary of the park core zone — meaning wildlife on both banks is abundant and undisturbed.
What to Expect
- Traditional hand-carved dugout canoe, steered by experienced boatman
- Marsh mugger and gharial crocodile sightings almost guaranteed
- Outstanding bird watching: kingfishers, cormorants, egrets, storks, and more
- Possibility of rhino, elephant, and deer sightings on the riverbank
- Morning mist over the river creates extraordinary photographic conditions
- Silent experience — no engine noise, total immersion in nature
🛶 Canoe Safari — Prices
* Canoe prices are per group. Guide fee is additional and shared across the group. We recommend the 1-hour or 3-hour option for the best wildlife experience. Transport to the river launch point can be arranged if needed.
🛶 Combo Recommendation: Combine a morning walking safari with an afternoon canoe trip for a complete Chitwan experience in one day. Ask us about combined pricing.
Tower Night Stay
Sleep in the jungle canopy. Wake to a symphony of wildlife at dawn.
A Night Above the Wild Jungle
For centuries, farmers in Chitwan's villages slept in wooden watch towers to protect their crops from rhinos and elephants. Today, those same towers — in community forests and park extension areas — offer one of the most extraordinary wildlife experiences in Nepal.
As night falls, the jungle transforms. Deer move into clearings. Wild boar root through the undergrowth. On fortunate nights, you may hear the distant roar of a tiger or the crashing footsteps of an elephant herd. The sky, undiluted by light pollution, blazes with stars above the jungle canopy.
At dawn, the jungle wakes in layers — first insects, then birds, then the deer and peacocks emerging into morning light. Your guide will be with you throughout, explaining every sound and movement.
Important Notes
- Tower stays are only available in community forests and park extension zones — not inside the core park area
- Basic bedding and mosquito nets are provided
- Guide stays the night with your group
- Dinner and breakfast can be arranged with local homestay family nearby
- Best experienced October through March (cool nights, high wildlife activity)
- Not recommended for guests with significant mobility limitations
🌙 Tower Night Stay — Prices
* Guide fee is shared across your group. Dinner and breakfast meals can be arranged at additional cost with a nearby local family. Transport to/from tower is included.
🌟 Recommended Add-On: Pair your tower night with an early morning walking safari starting at first light — the best possible combination for wildlife sightings.
Tharu Village Tour
The indigenous people of Chitwan — their culture, crafts, and deep bond with the forest.
The Original Guardians of Chitwan
The Tharu people have lived in the Terai forests of Nepal for thousands of years. They developed a remarkable genetic adaptation to malaria that allowed them to inhabit regions other communities found uninhabitable. Their relationship with the jungle is ancient, intimate, and sustainable.
Traditional Tharu villages are characterized by long, low houses built from mud, straw, and bamboo — the same materials used for centuries. Intricate geometric patterns are painted on the walls. Family compounds are arranged around shared courtyards. The Tharu language, weaving traditions, stick dances, and ceremonies remain vibrant and alive.
Our village tour is led by a local Tharu guide who will share the real story of his community — including how the establishment of Chitwan National Park affected Tharu families who were relocated from their ancestral lands, and how the community has worked to find a sustainable relationship with the protected area.
What the Tour Includes
- Walk through a traditional Tharu village with local guide
- Visit family homes and see traditional mud architecture
- Learn about Tharu farming, fishing, and forest practices
- See traditional Tharu weaving and crafts demonstrations
- Optional evening: watch traditional Tharu stick dance performance
- Meet community members and hear their stories
🏡 Tharu Village Tour — Prices
* Group pricing — bring your whole travel party for one guide fee. Duration approximately 2–3 hours. Can be combined with jungle walking safari or canoe safari for a full day of Chitwan culture and nature.
Community First. All village tours are arranged with community consent and benefit local Tharu families directly. We do not offer commercialised "cultural shows" — this is a genuine meeting between travellers and one of Nepal's most remarkable indigenous communities.
Homestay Experience
Sleep where your guide lives. Eat what his family cooks. Experience Chitwan from the inside.
The Most Authentic Night In Chitwan
You can stay in a resort with a swimming pool. Or you can stay in the home of a man whose father guided tourists through this jungle before there were roads. The choice says everything about the kind of traveller you are.
Our homestays are in the actual family homes of our local guides — situated in traditional villages on the edge of Chitwan National Park. Simple, clean rooms. Fresh home-cooked Nepali meals. Evenings spent talking around a fire with your host family. Mornings that start with birdsong, strong tea, and a walk into the jungle before the rest of the world wakes up.
This is how Krishna and his family grew up — and this is what they invite you to share.
Homestay Package Includes
- One private room (double or twin available)
- Two breakfasts
- One lunch
- One dinner
- Evening conversation with host family
- Optional morning walk in community forest
- Transport to/from safari starting point
Our Future Plan
We are expanding our homestay network so that every local guide in our team has a properly equipped guest room in their home. Our goal is that within the next few years, tourists can choose to stay with any of our guides, distributing income equally across the community.
🏠 Homestay — Prices
* Meals are home-cooked traditional Nepali and Tharu food. Vegetarian meals available. Special dietary requirements can be accommodated with advance notice. Safari activities are priced separately.
Photo Gallery
Real photographs from real safaris in Chitwan National Park.
The Jungle Blog

5 Animals You're Most Likely to See on a Walking Safari
Spotted deer are almost guaranteed. Rhinos frequent the grassland edge. Here's what to look for — and where — on your morning walk through the jungle.

Why Chitwan is One of Asia's Best Bird Watching Destinations
Over 500 species recorded — from the Giant Hornbill to the endangered Bengal Florican. A guide to the birds of Chitwan National Park and when to see them.

The Tharu People: Chitwan's Original Forest Guardians
Long before the national park existed, the Tharu people lived in harmony with this jungle. Their story is one of resilience, culture, and an unbroken bond with the natural world.

Sleeping in the Jungle: What to Expect from a Tower Night Stay
No luxury. No Wi-Fi. No distractions. Just the jungle at night, the stars above, and wild animals moving in the darkness below. This is what a real tower night feels like.

Gharial Crocodile: Nepal's Most Endangered Reptile
The gharial nearly went extinct in the 20th century. Thanks to Nepal's breeding programs on the Narayani and Rapti rivers, numbers are slowly recovering. Here's the full story.

Best Time to Visit Chitwan: A Month-by-Month Guide
From October's post-monsoon freshness to February's peak tiger season, every month offers something different in Chitwan. Here's how to choose the right time for your visit.
Book Your Safari
with Krishna
No middlemen. No booking fees. Direct contact with your guide.
Reach Us Directly
Born and raised in Chitwan National Park
Chitwan District, Nepal
💳 Payment Information
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