Celebrating India’s culinary heritage through 200+ traditional recipes spotlighting local ingredients, mindful food habits, and regional flavors—live-tasted and honored by chefs and food experts at a vibrant public showcase.
Understanding why we celebrate harvest festivals, what are their diversities, and how they connect us with our environment.
The top three teams received prizes by Sonam Wangchuk, an educationist and innovator from Ladakh, and Sunita Narain, Director General, Centre for Science and Environment
Your Essential Guide to the Cub Reporters Programme—Top Resources & Key Reporting Tips!
Revisiting the Green Schools Carnival 2025 and Awards Ceremony that celebrates the most sustainable schools in the country
Whenever that sweet tinkling sound traverses through my balcony, my entire mood rejuvenates. I crane my neck, investigating its source, and scan my lushy green enclave for a soft jingling song. Tracing the tsee…tseer… notes, I rejoice with delight on spotting the chirpy, cute, bundle of joy—the Indian White-Eye.
“Why didn’t you spot the Tiha today, dear?” That’s what my mother used to remind me on the New Year eves, when I was a little child like you. The Indian Roller bird, or the Tiha in Odia, is a very good omen. Believed to be a harbinger of happiness, sighting it is considered auspicious, especially at the beginning of any major life event. In fact, such is the faith in its sanctity that its feathers are preserved as lucky charms. Do you know Odisha, Telangana, and Karnataka have also declared it as their state bird?
If there is ever a bird that can rival even a hulk in roaring aloud, then that birdy has to be the Brown-Headed Barbet. This little creature’s blaring decibels can screech through the morning silence and can knock anyone out of their afternoon siesta as well. Its challenging, almost enticing, avian call proceeds like: tur-r-r-r kutrook-kutrook-kutrook...
A high schooler’s journey to uncover the mystery behind disappearing butterflies and some simple ways we can all conserve them.