At first light, Corbett breathes. Mist curls off the Ramganga like smoke rising from a dying charcoal fire. Chital stags step cautiously into the grasslands, antlers catching the first glow. From somewhere deep in the sal forest, the rumour of a tiger’s movement begins, gently at first – a jungle fowl’s tentative cluck, the nervous call of a barking deer. The rumour gathers momentum as a chital joins in, then a sambar with its thundering honk, and finally a langur with its urgent, grating call. The atmosphere is heavy, electric. Perhaps a tiger will step out – more likely, it won’t.
I have witnessed this scene countless times through numerous visits to India’s oldest national park, beginning when I was barely a month old, driving into a forest so vast it seemed endless. Since then, Corbett has been my second home, and often a refuge, a place where I’ve watched elephants grazing at sunset, gharials gliding through still pools, and – on countless, yet still heart-stopping occasions – tigers slipping like shadows across the grasslands.
But now, each return carries a new unease. The jeeps are more numerous. Resorts creep ever closer to the forest edge. And I find myself asking: how much love can a wild place bear before it begins to break?
Unlike Ranthambore’s celebrity tigers, most of Corbett’s big cats are enigmas. Of its 260-plus tigers, the largest population in any single reserve worldwide, only a handful have names: Paaro, Sharmili and the Grassland Female from earlier generations; Pedwali, Junior Paarwali, Titli and Bhola today. The rest live and die in anonymity, their secrecy hard-wired by generations of mothers teaching cubs to avoid humans. Having driven her mother off, the Grassland Female’s daughter now owns a precious piece of real estate within earshot of the sprawling Dhikala Forest Rest House. But she’s painfully shy, and rarely spotted. I’ve only ever seen her twice: dashing across the road one misty winter morning and then, years later, making a kill in thick lantana scrub.
This is Corbett’s magic: sightings may be less rare than they used to be, but they are still as precious, earned through stillness, resilience and a dash of luck. One summer morning, we waited for more than two hours in the shade of the sal canopy, with Dhikala FRH visible in the backdrop. A solitary alarm call had alerted our driver, Irfan, that a tiger was hiding in the thicket, waiting for the jeeps to move off. One by one, they eventually did. For the next hour, jeeps whizzed back and forth – Pedwali had been spotted near Khinnanuli FRH and Junior Paarwali on the other side of the river. We waited, and waited, growing increasingly frustrated. Just when we had given up all hope, a huge male, one of the Grassland Female’s final litter of three, popped his head out, as startled to see us as we were to see him. It took him mere seconds to cross the road and disappear again into nothingness.
The park itself is a living mosaic: 1,318 sq. km of Sal and Haldu forests, grasslands swept by summer winds, and riverine tracts embracing the mercurial Ramganga. Part of the Terai Arc Landscape, an 80,000 sq. km corridor for tigers and elephants, Corbett is a place where monsoons reshape rivers, winters bite, summers sear — and life, in all its fierce abundance, persists.
Corbett has become more than a sanctuary; it is now an economic engine humming at full tilt. In a recent study, I set out to understand just how deeply tiger tourism has transformed this landscape. I began with satellite imagery, tracing how concrete has spilled outward from Ramnagar and Dhikuli over the past 15 years. Where once there were fields and forest edges, there are now dense clusters of hotels and homestays – I counted more than 240 within an hour’s drive of the park gates.
The numbers are staggering. According to my (very rough) calculations, tiger tourism in Corbett generates upwards of INR 9.8 billion (approximately USD 114 million) annually, creating livelihoods for over 15,000 people. Of these, more than 12,000 work directly in the hospitality and tourism sector: as hoteliers, naturalists, safari drivers, guides, cooks, and cleaners. Then there are the ripple effects: electricians and mechanics servicing jeeps, carpenters building resort furniture, vegetable sellers supplying kitchens.
For many, this transformation has been nothing short of miraculous. “One or two people from every house are employed now,” Rahman, a veteran guide, told me. “Earlier, villagers killed deer, but today they protect them. We all know our survival depends on the animals surviving.” His words echoed what I heard again and again: tourism has turned potential poachers into protectors, farmers into entrepreneurs. Young men who might once have left for city jobs now stay, learning the language of the forest as guides and naturalists.
But prosperity has a price. The very success of tiger tourism threatens the delicate web it depends on. Resorts have mushroomed at an unsustainable pace. Satellite images show a dramatic expansion of built infrastructure along the park’s eastern boundary – the most profitable tourism zone, and also a critical wildlife corridor. Jeep convoys now choke narrow safari trails in peak season. “In one small area there are 80 vehicles at a time,” Rahman said. “Elephants get blocked. Tigers turn back.”
Tourism has also altered the park’s rhythms. Destination weddings and corporate retreats bring not just revenue but sound systems, DJs, and fairy lights that spill into the night. “People book hotels for Rs 30-50 lakhs and play music so loud it reaches the forest,” Rahman sighed. “It’s no longer about the forest. It’s about the party.”
Even the allure of tiger sightings has changed. Zakir Hussain, another guide, spoke with quiet frustration: “Some tourists just want selfies. They don’t care about birds or trees. They don’t sit still long enough to hear the forest.” The rise of social media has transformed wildlife into content – a quick video, a perfect photograph, a trophy moment to be shared, liked, and forgotten.
And while many locals have profited from the boom, others have been displaced. Land prices have soared as outside investors snap up plots for resorts. Families that sold their ancestral lands often find themselves with little to fall back on once the money runs out. “Some have done very well,” Zakir acknowledged. “But others… their lives have been destabilised. They are completely dependent on tourism now. But what happens if the tigers go?"
The paradox is hard to escape. Tourism funds conservation efforts, pays for forest guards, and raises global awareness. Yet the surge in visitor numbers and unregulated development risk undoing the very ecological balance that draws people here. Without restraint, Corbett could become a victim of its own success – a place where the tiger survives only as a mascot for luxury resorts.
For me, the magic has never been confined to tiger sightings. It lives in simpler moments: rhesus macaques cannonballing into forest pools, jackals leaping to chase vultures off a carcass lying half-submerged in soft mud, the sounds of alarm calls surrounding you deep into the night.
Those moments are harder to find now. Even the forest rest houses, once refuges of candlelight and silence, hum with activity. Outside the park, luxury resorts promise infinity pools and “curated wilderness experiences.” Corbett, in parts, has become an Instagram backdrop.
Corbett’s success is fragile. Left unchecked, the very tide of visitors and resorts could drown its wild heart. My study found that unregulated tourism has displaced some locals, driven land prices beyond reach, and increased human-wildlife conflict.
The solutions are neither radical nor complicated: higher entry fees to give picnickers and casual visitors pause, zone tourism to less-sensitive areas, and reinvest tourism revenues into habitat restoration and community development.
And yet Corbett still holds moments of transcendence. Dawn breaks over Dhikala’s grasslands. A herd of elephants bathing in the Ramganga. The hush that falls when a langur’s alarm call signals a tiger’s unseen presence.
Go, but go respectfully. Choose lodges that practise real eco-tourism. Hire local guides who understand and respect the forest. And remember: Corbett is not an amusement park; it is a living, breathing wilderness.