
The honest bit
Before you come
An honest, live look at the ground right now — before you come.
Back to homeRight now in Kunja
Summer· May – June
It's summer in the hills — warm and dry, the spring green fading to gold and the springs running low — but the nights stay cool.
Live conditions — each item shows its current status
Updates with the time of day and the season. Tap any status for the detail.
The highway can wash out
The main approach is NH 109, the Almora–Pithoragarh highway (formerly NH 87). It is a properly metalled road, but through a heavy monsoon the stretch around Kainchi Dham is prone to landslides and can be swept away or blocked off for hours at a time.
How we handle it — When that stretch is blocked, a reliable alternate loops in via Dhanachuli — just call us and we'll point you to the road running clear.
Our extension road is mud
The final stretch up to our gate is an old dirt extension road that the monsoon quietly redraws afresh every single year. It turns rough, and after a good spell of rain it can get slushy or briefly impassable to ordinary low cars with little ground clearance.
How we handle it — Motorcycles usually roll straight through, and where a car simply can't, we come down to meet you and walk the final bit in together.
Power can go out
Load-shedding is simply an ordinary part of everyday life this far up into the hills. The power here can cut out without very much warning at all — usually for only a few short minutes, yet every so often for a good deal longer, especially during a storm.
How we handle it — Our inverter keeps the essentials going through a cut — and a small power bank easily covers anything more.
The signal is patchy
Mobile coverage runs genuinely thin across these deep valleys, and only Vodafone and BSNL ever manage to hold a properly usable signal here. Jio barely registers unless you climb right up the ridge — somewhere you simply won't ever realistically be putting up.
How we handle it — Our Wi-Fi runs over the local mobile network and is almost always up, so you stay reachable even with no bars.
You're genuinely in the wild
This is honestly genuine leopard country, and not some safely fenced-off little safari park at all. We have watched one stroll calmly across our very own rooftop, and them hunting the village goats or the stray dogs nearby is a fairly ordinary night up here.
How we handle it — Don't roam alone, especially come evening or night — and you needn't. One of us is always glad to walk with you.
It gets cold — properly cold
Mountain air turns sharp the very moment the sun dips behind the ridges, and the deep of winter lays fresh snow all along them. A warm and perfectly bright afternoon can quietly give way to a properly near-freezing night without any real warning at all.
How we handle it — Every room is heated regardless, and warm woolens are easy to pick up from the local markets close by.
The homestay may pause
Every now and then the homestay itself needs attention — routine upkeep and repairs, a mandated fire-and-safety check, or a quiet spell we simply set aside — and that can pause or limit our welcome for a while. Whenever it does, we'll flag it right here first.
How we handle it — We plan any work around quiet periods and give invited guests plenty of notice, so a stay is never caught by surprise.
Do bring something for the house
We never charge for a stay — we keep the village's old welcome ritual instead. So do carry something small for the house: a token, a sweet, a little something from where you're from — anything at all. It's nothing to do with worth; it's simply what keeps the ritual running, and lets it pass the test of these modern times. Whatever you bring, we share it round the houses nearby — and more than anything, that's how word travels that you've arrived, and how the families close by come to know you.

One honest thing
The big view is a short climb
One honest thing, if the view is on your mind: the house sits cradled in cedar and pine — quiet, private, green — so the rooms look out onto forest and valley, not straight onto the snow line. The full Himalayan range opens up from the very top of the village, its highest point — a short climb on foot, or a quick drive up. Like most good things here, the big view is something you go to, not something handed to you on a balcony. And it's all the better for the going.
Our promise
You're looked after, round the clock
Your safety and your comfort matter to us above all. Our whole team — and the village around us — keep an eye out for you round the clock, so you're always looked after and in good hands here.
The people
Know your hosts
The people who run Kunja and look out for you — meet the family, and the village around them.
Before you set off
A few useful reads
None of this should worry you
People have lived well in these hills for generations, and so will you. A little preparation is all it takes — and the wildness is exactly why a stay here feels like nowhere else. If you're ever unsure, just call us and we'll guide you.
Unsure about anything before you set off? Just dial us up:
+91 75339 51350


