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WORKSHOPS, PHOTO TOURS, NATURALIST TRAINING, RESEARCH, DOCUMENTARIES & MORE...

Sinali takes many forms, collects many passions. With a beautiful riverside wilderness lodge (Outpost 12) at Kanha in India's jungle heartland, curating experiential tours and trails across some of the most fascinating terrains, working with diverse indigenous communities to curate a world that stays rooted in its origins - the world of Sinali is one where all hands are on deck and the heart is in the right place.

Recent Posts

Where the Forest Comes First

Where the Forest Comes First

Inside Kanha’s Newest Sustainable Sanctuary

In the heart of Madhya Pradesh, where the Sal forests whisper stories of Kipling and the tiger remains king, the definition of luxury is shifting. For decades, "five-star" meant opulence that stood apart from the wild; closed rooms, roaring generators and imported comforts. But at Outpost 12, the new sustainable bio-lodge initiative in Kanha, luxury has been reimagined. Here, the ultimate indulgence isn't gold plating; it is silence, darkness and structures that bow deeply to the land it occupies.

Built on a non-negotiable "forest-first" principle, Outpost 12 is more than a hotel; it is an honest attempt to create a retreat with the lowest environmental impact.

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A Day in the Life of a Naturalist at Outpost 12

A Day in the Life of a Naturalist at Outpost 12

The Interpreters of Silence

At Outpost 12, the day begins long before the first rays of the sun. While the guests are tucked under duvets, the naturalist team is already awake. Their job is often romanticised as simply "driving through the jungle", but the reality is a grueling, exhilarating 18-hour cycle of tracking, analysing and interpreting the complex language of the wild.

Here is what it takes to be the bridge between the human world and the secrets of Kanha.

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Kanha's winter magic

Kanha's winter magic

Winter settles into Kanha slowly, almost as if the forest is preparing for a performance. The mist begins to rise from the waterholes at first light, drifting gently across the sal forest. As the morning grows colder, a thick layer of frost forms on the grass, turning the entire meadow into a sparkling white carpet. On a good chilly winter morning, you can even see the whole grassland covered in frost. The landscape of Kanha changes.

Kanha National Park, being one of the most famous parks in India in terms of tiger sightings and sal forest, has one more gem of a species, the Barasingha or Hard Ground Swamp Deer (Rucervus duvaucelii branderi). A species which went on to the brink of extinction a few decades back now thrives in the meadows of Kanha National Park. In the 1960s the Barasingha population went down to just 66 individuals here and was the only population left in the world. All thanks to the MP Forest Department’s extensive efforts to save this species. Now there are over 1000+ individuals in Kanha, and some of them have been relocated to Van Vihar Bhopal, Satpura Tiger Reserve and Bandhavgarh Tiger Reserve.

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