Overview
Chitwan National Park is one of Asia’s finest wildlife sanctuaries — a UNESCO World Heritage Site since 1984 and home to the world’s most successful one-horned rhinoceros recovery programme (population grown from 95 in 1968 to over 700 today), a significant Bengal tiger population (around 130 individuals), wild elephants, Gangetic river dolphins, and four species of deer. The park’s inner jungle is extraordinarily diverse: terai sal forest, tall grasslands, and the Rapti and Narayani rivers forming a productive riparian ecosystem.
Activities include dawn jeep safaris (prime time for tiger sightings), jungle walks with armed naturalist guides (one-horned rhino encounters are common), dugout canoe safaris along the Rapti River (gharial and mugger crocodiles, river dolphins, kingfishers), and community visits to Tharu villages — the indigenous people of the Chitwan terai whose villages lie on the buffer zone boundary.
Wildlife Highlights
- One-horned rhinoceros (Rhinoceros unicornis) — sightings almost guaranteed
- Bengal tiger — sightings during jeep safaris (~40% success rate, best Oct–Feb)
- Gharial crocodile — critically endangered, Rapti River population
- Gangetic river dolphin — on the canoe safari
- 500+ bird species including the giant hornbill, Bengal florican, and lesser adjutant stork