Hunting for the Unicorn

The last expedition following in the footsteps of Bengt Berg, brings Natasha Illum Berg and Kire Godal to West Bengal, India to search for his “unicorn” or the one-horned Indian Rhino. Starting off in Kolkata, Natasha explores this amazing urban beehive of human life. From Kolkata, the journey to West Bengal’s Torsa River area along the border of Bhutan – where Bengt Berg spent time conducting some of the first Rhino counts in India. After several days of looking for a geographical point on the map, where Natasha and her grandfather could of actually crossed paths physically, we settled for a beautiful spot on the Torsa River, we judged to be a few kilometre’s from where he camped and lived in the late 1920’s and early 1930’s. When he was there, this area was somewhat protected but not yet a zoned national park.  Today, the banks of the Torsa are flanked by the Jaldapara National Park, and not far away is the Buxa Tiger Reserve. When Bengt Berg came to West Bengal, he was the first to photograph Indian Rhino in the wild and do a count of them.  Like today, 100 years ago, the rhino populations were under serious threat due to the demand for their horns in China. After a beautiful, demanding, and powerful experience finding and filming “unicorns” in the wild – Natasha and Kire are now on to putting together two years of Skypaths footage taken around the world; from Sweden, to Ethiopia, Tanzania, Nepal and finally India.

Team iTravel managed the complete production part for this episode which was shot in various parts of West Bengal. Including Permissions, Travel, Accommodation, Equipments, Local Crew, Research Work.

Skypaths Series

Kire Godal (Wildlife FilmMaker) presents a journey across the world with Natasha Illum Berg, a Swedish writer, conservationist, and naturalist hunter who retraces the footsteps of her grandfather, Bengt Berg, the pioneering wildlife photographer, writer, explorer and filmmaker – a visionary who took great risks for animals a century ago – a grandfather she never met. From remote Africa, to India and the Himalayas, Natasha repeats his most groundbreaking film expeditions 100 years after he did the same. Through Bengt Berg’s original writings, wildlife footage and photos – a lens into the past is opened and together a parallel adventure story takes place – between grandfather and granddaughter – a century apart. Told from Natasha’s, and her grandfather Bengt Berg’s, unique, provocative and informed perspectives – each episode’s theme asks a thought provoking question about man’s place in nature today.

PS: All excerpts have been taken from the Series Website. To read about the entire series, CLICK HERE