India’s adventure tourism industry is having a moment. More people than ever are heading into the mountains, booking river expeditions and signing up for treks. That energy is genuinely exciting. But growth without accountability has a way of turning a good thing into a dangerous one.
Deccan Chronicle recently sat down with Vaibhav Kala, founder of Aquaterra Adventures, to talk about exactly that tension: the gap between the industry’s rapid expansion and the safety, regulation and environmental thinking needed to sustain it responsibly.
His words on social media’s role are worth sitting with:
“This is once again linked to a lack of awareness. It needs to be addressed through stronger customer awareness campaigns and perhaps even educational toolkits for people interested in adventure travel experiences.”
The point he’s making isn’t that people shouldn’t seek adventure. It’s that the shortcuts, the viral itineraries, the “just go for it” culture being amplified online, are leading people into situations they aren’t prepared for. Adventure travel needs to be matched with an individual’s ability, aptitude, inclination and fitness levels. That matching doesn’t happen through a reel.
At Atali Ganga, this isn’t a new conversation for us. It’s the one we’ve been having since 1995.
Three decades of operating in Uttarakhand has taught us that the Himalayas are not a backdrop. They are a dynamic, increasingly unpredictable environment. Climate change has made that more true every year. Planning an expedition today means monitoring weather forecasts obsessively, building in backup resources, training every guide for evacuation scenarios and always having a Plan B.
That preparation has a cost. It’s reflected in how we hire, how we train, how we build our itineraries and how we communicate with guests before they ever set foot on a trail. It’s not glamorous, but it’s the work that keeps people safe.
Kala also speaks about the Leave No Trace ethos as the foundation of environmental responsibility: take nothing but photographs, leave nothing but footprints. Simple in principle, genuinely difficult in practice at scale. We’ve built our operations around it because we believe that the only way to run adventures in places this special is to ensure they remain special for the next group coming through.
India’s wilderness destinations are not inexhaustible. The more the industry treats them that way, the faster they get used up. Responsible operators, proper licensing, informed travellers, these aren’t bureaucratic niceties. They’re the difference between adventure tourism that lasts and one that burns through its own foundations.
We’re glad this conversation is happening publicly. We just think the industry needs to act on it faster.
Originally reported by Reshmi AR for Deccan Chronicle. Read the full interview here
Address: Milestone 30, Badrinath Road, Rishikesh, Uttarakhand, India
Mobile: +91-7060072708
Email: bookings@ataliganga.com
Our property is an oasis surrounded by Reserved Forest, and it is a thorough privilege to be so close to nature. If you book, come with the purpose of living in the valley of India’s holiest life force, the Ganga, for the call of the barking deer, or the midnight roar of the leopard ; and for that lovely dull ache after a busy day in the great outdoors. 80% of the property is built on a hillside, and you will have to walk a series of steps to reach your cottage. If your group includes infants, small kids and infirm elders, do request for cottages closer to the Cafe´.
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Address: Milestone 30, Badrinath Road, Rishikesh, Uttarakhand, India
Mobile: +91-7060072708
Email: bookings@ataliganga.com