




Bucketlist Roadtrip in Northeast India
Two states, four properties, one incredible road trip. We fly into Guwahati and drive up into the Khasi hills of Meghalaya, spending three nights in Sohra (Cherrapunji), where we hike to living root bridges grown by Khasi farmers over generations, explore limestone caves underground, and watch Nohkalikai Falls plunge into the mist. Then one night in Shillong, the rock capital of India, before crossing into Assam. In Kaziranga, we wake before dawn for jeep safaris through grasslands that hold more one-horned rhinos than anywhere else on earth. Then we ferry across the Brahmaputra, one of the great rivers of Asia to Majuli Island, where neo-Vaishnavite monks have preserved classical Sattriya dance for 500 years, and where a Mising family will teach us to make Apong, their traditional rice wine. This isn't a highlight reel. It's a slow, honest journey through two states that most Indians have never been to. Long drives with good playlists. Hikes that earn you your lunch. A crew that becomes a tribe by Day 3.
An 8-night road trip through Northeast India's most underrated landscapes, from the living root bridges of Meghalaya to the one-horned rhinos of Kaziranga and the river monasteries of Majuli. This is India as most people have never seen it.
Wellness
Moderate
Trip highlights
Pick your date. Takes 5 min.
9 Days from
₹1,09,000
per person - taxes extra
Talk to a Curator20% hold: Hold your invite now. Balance later.
Curated room: Max 14 travellers. Profiles before payment.
People you'll meet
The executive chairman of Wissen Infotech felt the timing was right, so did the head of Data & AI at Mercedes-Benz navigating a season shift, and the head of risk analytics at Aditya Birla Capital.




What's included
All 11 experiences in itinerary
3 nights at Sai Mika Resort + 1 night at Windermere Resort, Shillong + 2 nights at Habitas Rhino, Kaziranga + 2 nights at Enchanting Majuli Resort
12 meals · 8 breakfasts, 2 lunches, 2 hosted dinners
Jeep safaris (Kaziranga)
Caving gear
Apong experience
Your Gameplan
Into the Clouds
- The name “Meghalaya” literally means “abode of clouds” and from the moment you land in Guwahati, the drive north tells you why.
- We meet at the airport by 11 AM, bundle into Innovas, and head for the hills. First stop is Nongpoh for a proper lunch pit stop, then Umiam Lake where the Khasi hills start folding in around you and you’ll want to just stand at the viewpoint with a cup of chai for a bit.
- If the light’s still good, we swing into Laitmawsiang the Garden of Caves for a quick walk-through mossy rock formations that look like they belong in a fantasy novel.
- By evening we roll into Sai Mika Resort in Sohra (yes, Cherrapunji, one of the wettest places on earth), check in, crack open the welcome dinner, and let the clouds do their thing outside the window.

Where the Trees Build Bridges
- Big day. We drive down toward Shella, the border town that looks across the river into Bangladesh - the landscape here shifts from hills to wide, lazy rivers, and the air gets thicker.
- Spend the morning by the riverbank: boat ride, swim, or just lie on the warm stones and zone out. Lunch happens trailside.
- Then comes the main event - a hike to the Ummunoi Living Root Bridge. These aren’t built, they’re grown. Khasi farmers have been training the aerial roots of rubber fig trees across rivers for generations. It’s a 3–3.5 hour round-trip hike, moderate but real, with slippery stone steps and a jungle canopy overhead.
- We drive back to Sai Mika by evening.

Waterfalls & Wisdom
- Sohra in October is waterfall country. We start with a short hike to Rangsokham Falls, less crowded than the famous ones, more beautiful than most people realize.
- Afternoon we slow things down with a bamboo crafting workshop at Mawyir - hands-on, guided by local artisans who’ve been working bamboo for decades. You’ll leave with something you made.
- Evening: sunset at Nohkalikai Falls, one of the tallest plunge waterfalls in India. If you want, there’s an optional Khasi Highland Cheese & Wine tasting table set up for the view. (Not included, a treat-yourself add-on.)
- Dinner back at the resort or at a café in Sohra town.

Underground First, Cafes After
- Morning starts underground. We drive to Lymput for a caving expedition, proper helmets, headlamps, a bit of crawling, tight squeezes, the works. It’s the kind of thing you’ll be telling people about for months.
- Scrub off the cave mud, grab breakfast, then it’s a scenic 2.5-3 hour drive to Shillong, the so-called “Scotland of the East."
- Check into Windermere in the late afternoon, and the rest of the day is yours. Shillong has the best cafe scene in Northeast India, a live music culture that built itself on rock, blues, and jazz, and enough bars to keep everyone happy. Wander Police Bazaar, grab dinner somewhere random, find a pub with a band on.

Enter the Wild!
- Long drive day, 5.5–6 hours from Shillong to Kaziranga. The terrain shifts completely: from pine hills to tea estates to the wide floodplains of the Brahmaputra. We’ll break the drive with stops.
- Arrive at Habitas Rhino by late afternoon. This is where the trip shifts into a different gear, the property sits on the edge of one of India’s most iconic national parks, and the vibe is all slow-living, jungle sounds, open sky.
- Walk the property, settle in, and then we head to Kohora Orchid Park in the evening for a cultural show with local tribal music and dance - a good warm-up for the safari days ahead.

Jeeps & Rhinos
- Two safaris. One day. This is the day you came for.
- Alarm’s early, we’re out for the dawn jeep safari, when Kaziranga is at its most alive. You’re looking for one-horned rhinos (there are more here than anywhere else on earth), wild water buffalo, swamp deer, and if you’re lucky, a glimpse of a tiger. Our naturalist will read the landscape for you.
- Back for breakfast, some pool time, maybe a nap.
- Afternoon safari goes out again - different zone, different light, different animals out feeding.

Cross the Brahmaputra
- We pack up and drive to Nemati Ghat, where the ferry to Majuli is waiting. The crossing itself is the experience - loaded cars, bikes, people, livestock, and you on the upper deck watching one of the world’s great rivers stretch out in every direction.
- Majuli is the world’s largest river island, home to neo-Vaishnavite monasteries (satras) that have been running since the 1500s. The whole place moves differently. Slower. Older.
- We check into Enchanting Majuli, and if the weather and light cooperate, we’ll catch sunset from the riverside - the Brahmaputra at dusk is unforgettable.

Monks, Dances, Rice Wine
- This is the cultural heart of the trip. We start at Uttar Kamalabari Satra, one of Majuli’s most important monasteries, where celibate monks have preserved Sattriya classical dance and music for over 400 years. You’ll sit in on a performance - their living tradition.
- Lunch, then we drive to Jengraimukh village for a Missing community experience. The Missing are one of the main tribes of the island, and today you’ll get hands-on with Apong - their traditional rice wine made and tasted with a family who’s been doing this for generations.
- Afternoon opens up into cultural interaction and storytelling with local artisans. A slow, unhurried afternoon that you rarely get on a structured trip.
- Return to the stay for dinner together, last proper night of the trip.

The Last Ferry
- One last ferry. We board late morning from Majuli ghat, cross back to the mainland, and drive ~2 hours to Jorhat Airport.
- Somewhere on that ferry you’ll realise the trip’s actually ending - which is the right moment to trade numbers and Instagram handles with your tribe before you scatter back to your cities.
- Departure from Jorhat.

Our Favourite Stays
We work with these or similar hotels to ensure a stylish and comfortable stay every time.

Sai Mika Resort
Perched in the Khasi hills overlooking the plateau, the property is the destination, not a base for walking out to cafes. Nearest village is a short drive. You’ll be here for the silence, the clouds rolling through, and the stone cottages.

Windermere Resort, Shillong
Tucked into the pine-covered outskirts of Shillong, 15–20 min from Police Bazaar and the cafe/music scene. Scottish-hill-station vibes — cooler, quieter, less chaotic than central Shillong. We’ll drive in for the evening out.

Habitas Rhino, Kaziranga
Sits on the edge of Kaziranga National Park in traditional-style cottages. You’re deep in tea-country-meets-grassland territory — no town walking, no nearby cafes.

Enchanting Majuli Resort
Majuli is the world’s largest river island — the whole island runs on its own rhythm, cycle-rickshaws, dirt roads, neo-Vaishnavite monasteries. The resort is your base for visits to satras and Mising villages. Don’t expect urban conveniences.

Bucketlist
Curated adventures across the world for people who want to vibe, connect, and cross off epic dreams
“I have never seen someone do their job with so much passion. The facilitator's energy and care were the biggest factor.”
Aadish Aggarwal
June 2026 - Bucketlist Roadtrip in Northeast India

Have questions?
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