VISITORS
It is sheer irony that one of Ranthambhore Bagh's first visitors was actually a bagh (which is Hindi for tiger). Before we took up the place, a tigress came to the empty building and stayed for 3 days on the terrace with a kill. A lot of birds from lapwings, robins, mynas, flycatchers, sunbirds, tailorbirds, warblers, babblers, barbets, francolins, orioles, pigeons and doves have nested on our property. We ourselves have had diverse pets like dogs, rabbits, hare, hen, rooster, ducks, mongoose and even a hedgehog. It seems The Bagh's destiny was clear the day the tigress visited us. Ever since some 20,000 people of over 55 nationalities have come to The Ranthambhore Bagh with one aim - to get a glimpse of the magnificent tiger. Diplomats, families, newly weds, photographers, filmmakers, school trips, corporate teams, we've played host to diverse people bound by one common thread - the love of wildlife.
As a small gesture of charity, we have hosted the Spastic Home from Jaipur, Home for Street Girls from Thane and other social institutes, who stayed at no charge.
The Ranthambhore Bagh is the regular haunt for the world's top wildlife, nature and other photographers like Andy Rouse, Theo Allofs, John Isaac, Peter Philips, Robert Huber, Chris Brunskill, Daisy Gilardini, Nanak C Dhingra, Kakubhai Kothari, Vijay Cavale, and Nick Garbut.
We have spent entire months offering local support to film camera teams like Colin Johnson of the BBC, TBS and NHK from Japan Ian Miller of South Africa. In fact, the Bagh is also the place of choice when they are not on assignment.
The Bagh has been an adventure getaway and the perfect team-building exercise for corporate groups from Airtel, Brittania, Coke, KPMG, Ranbaxy, ICICI and Sanctuary Magazine.
"It was sublime - I'll be back, thanks very much."Harry Hook, Hollywood Director, UK.