Responsible Travel
Travel That
Gives Back
Every expedition funds local livelihoods, protects wild places, and connects you with the communities that make these journeys worth taking.
Our Philosophy
The best expeditions
don't just visit a place.
They sustain it.
We work exclusively with local guides and community-run operations. Not because it checks a box, but because they make the experience genuinely better. They know where the snow leopards move at dusk. They know which elder will invite you in for tea. They know this land in ways no outside operator ever could. The conservation impact follows naturally from that. So does the access.
Partners & Initiatives
Organizations
we support
We work with conservation bodies, community cooperatives, and cultural preservation initiatives across every destination we operate in. The relationships below are active, not cosmetic.
Snow Leopard Foundation Kyrgyzstan
Led by Kuban Jumabai uulu from the Tian Shan, SLFK has converted former hunting concessions into co-managed wildlife sanctuaries, trained over 90 citizen rangers, and built an ecotourism model inside the Sarychat-Ertash Reserve where snow leopard sightings are recorded on 90% of tours. A portion of every Snow Leopard Expedition booking funds their ranger operations and community conservation fund directly.
Snow Leopard Foundation KyrgyzstanSouth Rupununi Conservation Society
Founded in 1998 by people who call the Rupununi home, SRCS is Guyana's leading grassroots conservation NGO. Based at Wichabai Ranch, they train community rangers, monitor threatened species including the endangered Red Siskin and Giant Anteater, and established South Central Rupununi as Guyana's first Important Bird and Biodiversity Area.
Learn more about SRCSAsociacion Armonia
Bolivia's leading grassroots bird conservation NGO and BirdLife International partner, Armonia has pulled the Blue-throated Macaw back from the brink of extinction through community nesting programs in the Beni savannahs. Working directly with Quechua communities in south-central Bolivia, they run community-owned ecotourism at the Red-fronted Macaw Nature Reserve, the species' most important breeding site on earth.
Learn more about Armonia