KAP -2 On the Move
Cheetah–Tiger Sharing the Same Landscape in India 🇮🇳
A History in the Making 🐆🐅
From the grasslands of Kuno National Park to the forests of Ranthambore National Park, KAP2 is telling a powerful story of movement and adaptation.
Today's evening safari in Kuno rewarded our guests with an unforgettable sighting of female cheetah Nirva and her three cubs in the wild. Watching a cheetah mother and her cubs thriving in their natural habitat is a rare and remarkable experience.#KunoNationalPark#ProjectCheetah
Fastest on land, slowest on a lazy afternoon.
A wild cheetah yawning, scratching, and enjoying the day in Kuno National Park.
Book your safari with Flying Cat Safari and witness this remarkable conservation success story for yourself.
#FlyingCatSafari#Kuno#kunonationalpark
A female cheetah from Botswana, named CCB3, cleaning herself after finishing a spotted deer kill during the peak summer season in Kuno National Park.
#Flyingcatsafari#projectcheetah#kunonationalpark
This moment represents more than a sighting.
It reflects the possibility of shared landscapes, natural movement, and evolving ecosystems — a glimpse into the future of conservation
📍Kuno ➡️ Ranthambore
🌿 A story of genes, journeys, and coexistence
Recently spotted in Zone 9 of Ranthambore, this cheetah has captured the spotlight — but these images take us back to its time in Kuno, thriving in its natural habitat.
KAP2 carries a remarkable lineage.
nd explore runs deep in its genes.
Tiger T2512 is currently present inside Kuno National Park, with multiple sightings reported within the same landscape where cheetahs and leopards are moving.
This is not the first time such an overlap has occurred.
In the Photos T-2512 in Kuno National Park in March 2026.
KAP -2 On the Move
Cheetah–Tiger Sharing the Same Landscape in India 🇮🇳
A History in the Making 🐆🐅
From the grasslands of Kuno National Park to the forests of Ranthambore National Park, KAP2 is telling a powerful story of movement and adaptation.
A new chapter in India-Botswana wildlife conservation partnership: At the Mokolodi Nature Reserve in Botswana, President Droupadi Murmu and President Duma Gideon Boko witnessed the release of captured cheetahs originating from Botswana's Ghanzi region into the quarantine facility by experts from India and Botswana. The event symbolized Botswana’s gifting of eight cheetahs to India under the next phase of Project Cheetah.
These cheetahs resting in the wild terrain of Kuno National Park remind us of the quiet intensity that defines a true wildlife safari experience. Face-to-face with India’s only cheetah safari, every glance feels like a moment frozen in time—raw, rare and real.