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Whenever you're thinking of planning a trip, the first thing you do is scroll through social media to dig up more details about your desired destination. Following a few good travel vloggers always comes in handy, whether it’s for a two-day trip or a long vacation.
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There are several travel content creators in India who have fun and informative vlogs with detailed recommendations and tips — the best places to visit, stay at, eat, and more.
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So, here is a list of some of the best travel YouTubers in India, who can guide you when you plan your next trip
He was once a barefoot boy in a remote UP village, mesmerised by earthworms and butterflies.
Years later, he’d help solve the biggest crimes in India, not with a gun, but with DNA.
This is the forgotten story of Dr Lalji Singh, the pioneer who brought DNA fingerprinting to India, transformed criminal investigation, and made science accessible to millions.
Scroll down to discover how a farmer’s son became the ‘Father of Indian DNA Fingerprinting’. >>
In Assam’s Biswanath district, an ancient temple is quietly leading a conservation revolution.
With no fences or fanfare, the Nagshankar temple has become a safe haven for 13 freshwater turtle species, including some that were once thought extinct in the wild.
Thanks to the temple’s sacred pond, local turtle guardians, and the powerful blend of faith and ecology, these gentle scavengers are making a comeback.
Scroll down to see how a centuries-old tradition is helping turtles return to the wild →
“Writing was in me since the beginning. I knew I wanted to write something meaningful, something lasting,” said Pintu Pohan to The Telegraph.
In a bustling corner of Behala, Kolkata, sits a modest paan shop. Behind the counter stands a man who has written 12 Bengali books, over 200 poems and stories, and been published in Desh, Anandamela, Sananda and more.
Meet Pintu Pohan. Paan seller by trade. Writer by heart.
He grew up in poverty and dropped out after Class 10.
To survive, he did it all.
“I have sold fish and flowers, worked as a mason and electrician. Some days, I earned just ₹30. But I never let go of my pen.” he shared.
In the 1960s, Dr. Pramod Sethi, an Indian surgeon, saw a gap that Western prosthetics didn’t work for people who walked barefoot or sat cross-legged.
So he joined hands with Ram Chandra Sharma, a sculptor, and together they created the Jaipur Foot, an innovation born from empathy, not profit.
Decades later, that same invention would cross borders into war-torn Afghanistan…Where thousands of amputees, injured by landmines, would walk again, thanks to India’s ongoing prosthetic camps.
Swipe to discover how a humble Indian invention is rewriting destinies across the world →
When Dr. Ratan Chandra Kar arrived on an Andaman shore in 1998, he wasn’t just entering a forest—he was stepping into 150 years of silence, mistrust, and pain.
The Jarawas had resisted every outsider for generations.
But instead of fear, Dr. Kar met them with food, respect, and quiet persistence.
He didn’t just save lives. He proved that true change begins not with authority, but with humility.
How do you rebuild trust where none existed?
On Doctors' Day, scroll down to see how one man did it—with no weapons, just empathy.