The Jim Corbett National Park is India’s largest, oldest and most known national park. It is the world’s best known habitat of the endangered Royal Bengal Tiger. Tourists and wildlife enthusiasts from all nook and corners of the world come here every year for tiger sighting.

The Corbett Park is located in the foothills of the Himalayas in the Nainital District of Uttarakhand (India). Its geographical location gives it a unique climate and a rare and long altitude range – this allows for a wide biodiversity even within the park. Temperatures can range from above 40 in the lowest point during summers to below zero at the highest point park in the park during the cold winter months of December and January.

The Tiger is the most famous resident of the Corbett National Park but not its only resident – leopards, cheetahs, elephants and a large variety of birds (numbering over 300 different species) and an interesting aquatic wildlife make the Corbett one of the most biodiverse parks in the world.