Himalayan Region · Since 2018
We are not just visitors to the Himalayas — we live here, we care here. Planting trees, cleaning rivers, protecting wildlife, and standing with the communities who call these mountains home.
No offices, no distance — hands-in-soil, feet-on-trails work for the Himalayas we call home.
Mass plantation drives across degraded slopes and forest edges in the Himalayan region. Native species, local saplings, community involvement — we plant trees that will outlast all of us.
Ongoing · Every SeasonPilgrimage routes, trekking trails, and sacred riverbanks carry the weight of thousands of visitors yearly. Our teams go deep — collecting waste, educating travellers, restoring the sanctity of ancient paths.
Pre & Post SeasonThe people of the mountains are its real guardians. We work alongside local communities — supporting livelihoods, connecting artisans and farmers to markets, ensuring conservation benefits those who live closest to nature.
Year RoundFrom snow leopard corridors to alpine meadows, the Himalayan ecosystem is fragile and irreplaceable. We document threats, work with forest departments, and campaign for habitat protection tourism often ignores.
Monitoring & Advocacy"The Himalayas don't need our admiration —
they need our action."
We believe that tourism and nature must grow together in harmony. By promoting responsible and mindful travel, we support local communities while actively conserving the natural beauty of the Himalayas. Our journeys encourage eco-friendly practices, minimal plastic usage, and conscious waste management — ensuring that tourism leaves a positive impact rather than a footprint.
Through awareness, respect for the environment and active participation in conservation efforts, we aim to protect these pristine landscapes while allowing travellers to experience their true essence.
800+ native Oak, Rhododendron and Deodar saplings planted across degraded ridgelines. 60 volunteers, 3 days, one hill greener.
After every pilgrim season we go back. This year our team collected over 400 kg of waste from the Adi Kailash route.
Connecting traditional Bhotiya crafts to markets beyond the mountains — preserving culture while building livelihoods.
Nestled deep in the Kumaon Himalayas, Adi Kailash is one of the most sacred peaks in the Hindu tradition — spiritually equivalent to Mount Kailash in Tibet. Om Parvat, nearby, carries a natural snow formation in the shape of the sacred ॐ symbol, visible from the Nabhidhang viewpoint.
These are not merely destinations — they are living shrines embedded in the ecosystem we work to protect. We also offer carefully guided, responsible yatras to these sacred places: small groups, zero-waste practices, and deep respect for the land.
We organise small-group, responsible Himalayan journeys — not to be a travel company, but because guided travel done right protects the places we love. Every rupee from our tours goes back into conservation and community work.
Expert local guides, zero-plastic camps, small groups only — and trails left better than we found them.
View Tour PackagesWhether you want to join a plantation drive, volunteer for a cleanup, travel responsibly, or simply spread the word — there is a place for you.