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Home :: Palace on Wheels Travels
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Palace on Wheels Tours - Palace
on Wheels Travels
Duration : 07 Nights / 08 Days Destination covered :Delhi - Jaipur- Jaisalmer - Jodhpur - Sawai Madhopur- Chittaurgarh - Udaipur- Bharatpur - Agra Palace on Wheels India | |
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Palace on Wheels Travels
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Like Golden triangle tours, the Palace on Wheels india is one of the world's most exciting journeys, as much for the train and the facilities provided on board, as for the royal destinations it proceeds to every single day. With everything taken care of - dining, accommodation, sightseeing - as well as organized shopping, there is nothing for the traveler to do but seep in the history of the land, soak in the colors, and experience the royal life of a maharaja.
Day 01 : Wednesday
The tour starts in the evening with the ceremonial welcome aboard the Palace
on Wheels india at Delhi Cantonment. Delhi too is an ancient capital,
Day 02 : Thursday
Travel to palace on wheels tours arrive 02:00 hrs in Jaipur to be greeted by caparisoned
elephants. Lunch will be served at Rambagh Palace, and dinner is a celebration
under the canopy
Day 03 : Friday
Travel
to palace on wheels arrive at 08:15 hrs at Jaisalmer. Spend the day in this
isolated, but architecturally one of the greatest royal bastions of the world.
After a safari dinner served under the stars, at a campsite, come back to
the train to resume your journey. Departure is at 23:00 hrs. Jaisalmer was
the stronghold of the Bhatti Rajputs, and a hardier race never lived. Their
early settlement was marked by brigandage, as they looted caravans at will,
stealing horses, and inviting the wrath of the West Asian invaders. Over time
they began to settle, and the 12th century fort with its ninety-nine bristling
bastions was established on top of Trikuta hill, exactly as prophesied for
these descendants of Krishna. Isolated Jaisalmer may have been, a lost city
in the sands of the Thar, more mythic than real, for those of who heard of
it, but the caravans that passed through its territories enriched the coffers
of the treasury. It also kept Jaisalmer in touch with the world, for such
caravans carried not merely goods but also artisans and master-craftsmen.
The Maharawals of Jaisalmer thought of making use of their services to build
the magnificent, sandstone architecture for which it has become known around
the world.
Day 04 : Saturday
Time for you to visit yet another desert kingdom, Jodhpur, travel to palace
on wheels you arrive at 07:00 hrs. You can spend the morning at Mehrangarh
Fort that towers over the city like an eagle's eye, and then come downhill
to lunch at Umaid Bhawan Palace, the largest art-deco residence in the world,
and now home to the head of the royal family, museum and luxury hotel. Departure,
after unwinding in the palace, is at 15:30 hrs. The history of Jodhpur is
five-hundred-year-old, the bastion of the valiant Rathore Rajputs, bristles
with conflicts and sieges, with battles and savage skirmishes, so it is difficult
to believe that they found the time to not only build the impossibly invincible-looking
Mehrangarh Fort, but also its lavish, and delicately embellished palaces.
Within the fort, the accoutrements of the royal past are well presented -
swords and daggers and spears and matchlock guns; a battle tent seized from
Emperor Jehangir; howdahs and chariots and carriages; cribs and beds; the
royal, octagonal throne; musical instruments, large drums, even a collection
of turbans. From the ramparts of the fort, where the cannons are still mounted,
the sweeping view also takes in a huge palace located on top of another, though
lower, hill. This is Umaid Bhawan, the palace the maharajas set out to build
as a famine relief project, but also ambitiously as the world's largest private
residence. It was intended to, and did, rival the presidential palace coming
up at Delhi. Built by a British architect, while the planning has incorporated
the elements of the Rajput lifestyle (large courtyards, for example, or a
zenana wing), there is a formal, western sense of symmetry and restrained
sense of ornamentation. Only in the royal suites does exuberance take over,
since a Polish artist, then traveling in India, was given the permission to
create huge paintings to suit the art-deco theme of the architecture and furniture
in the palace. A museum here, unlike that of the fort, has memorabilia that
consists of clocks and silver and tableware, a nostalgic look at a more recent
past. The grounds of the palace are huge, and toward the back, there is a
bougainvillea garden, perhaps the only one of its kind in the world, and at
the end, a baradari, a pillared pavilion where the maharajas held mehfils,
entertainment courts. Within the palace, the courtrooms are more formal, while
the ballrooms resounded, till recently, with the sounds of revelry, now captured
in the whispered conversations of tourists. This is one of the best
Indian cultural tours.
Day 05 : Sunday
Steam
into Sawai Madhopur to spend the day in the wilds of Ranthambor National Park,
which is home to the royal Bengal tiger, the stateliest of the big cats. As
it moves through the underbrush, its tawny gold hide striped with bands of
black, the jungle stands to attention. Ranthambor is also very picturesque.
A number of lakes form the shallow lands where tiger sightings are quite common,
and where herds of deer can be seen foraging while crocodiles bask in the
sun. The hills ring the park, and in the distance the ramparts of Ranthambor
fort create a dramatic silhouette. Once, this was the scene for fierce battles,
and for fiery jauhars, but all that is of the past now, though former hunting
lodges such as Jogi Mahal, close to the lakes, is still in a great state of
preservation. Ranthambor is particularly well known for its tiger sightings
because the undisturbed environs and the spreading, shallow lakes provide
them the surroundings best suited to their needs, and therefore sightings
by day time are quite common. Various conversationalists and wildlife photographers
have worked at length here to document the life cycle of the tigresses of
Ranthambor, even giving them names, so that they are now a part of the regional
lore. Since the best time to visit the park is in the early morning, the train
arrives at 04:00 hrs, and leaves for its next destination at 10:30 hrs. Lunch
and dinner are served on board the train, since the journey is a long one.
This afternoon, it's time to relax from your earlier hectic schedule, and
spend it on reading, making friends, and watch the changing topography of
this semi-arid desert as it changes from the lush forests of the Aravallis
to the flat plains, and eventually barren, sandy desert. Sunday, Chittaurgarh
and Udaipur, the capitals of the Sisodia Maharanas, enjoy pre-eminence among
the Rajput clans of Rajasthan. Arrival at Chittaurgarh at 16:00 hrs. Chittaurgarh
is India's most valorous fort, its history an unending saga of passion, chivalry
and romance. Within its sprawling ramparts were beautiful palaces, but few
of them remain, the fort having been sacked by invaders through acts of treachery.
It was finally abandoned following the long Mughal siege and the battle of
Haldighati. The Sisodias escaped to the hills and lived the life of nomads
while they schemed to avenge their honor.
Day 06 : Monday
In time, the Sisodias also laid the foundation for a new kingdom - Udaipur
- situated by Lake Pichola, where the impressive City Palace was lavished
with aesthetic embellishments, and the art of miniature paintings was encouraged
in its ateliers. Subsequently, too, the princes built the island palaces,
summer retreats that cover the masses of land so that the building looks afloat
in water. Besides the Lake Palace, there are other such retreats that have
been converted into hotels, one of them Shiv Niwas, being run by the current
head of the family. A graceful, valorous race, the Sisodias and their city
bring alive the excitement of a medieval kingdom as it once was, and with
a little imagination, can still almost be?.
Day 07 : If it's Tuesday
It must be Bharatpur. Arrive at 06:30 hrs at a royal kingdom where the Jats,
rather than the Rajputs, ruled. Bharatpur's Jat history is not too old, with
Suraj Mal establishing a firm stronghold in the region contested by both the
Rajputs and the Mughals. Suraj Mal's exploits are legendary, and the fort,
Lohagarh, or iron fort, has a history that recounts it with pride. The only
fort in the state to have bastions of mud, these proved meritorious because
they simply swallowed up the canon shells, not allowing them to impact. However,
it is not for its fort, or palace, or even the close-by fortified resort of
Deeg that the passengers of the Palace on Wheels are here for: their attention
is drawn to the bird sanctuary, one of the finest in the world. The Keoladeo
Ghana National Park was developed by a royal edict when dykes were created
so that water could be channelised for the hunting preserve the maharaja of
Bharatpur wished to create. In the early decade of this century, Bharatpur
became famous among visiting British royalty and aristocracy for the amount
of game the visitors bagged. These days, thankfully, only shooting by cameras
is permitted in this sanctuary with over three hundred species of birds, many
of them migrant species that come from parts as distant as Siberia and China.After
visiting the sanctuary in the morning, visitors travel by coach to Fatehpur
Sikri, the red sandstone city built by Emperor Akbar on a lavish scale, but
which he had to abandon soon after because of a shortage of water. From here
to Agra, first for lunch at Welcomgroup Mughal Sheraton, and then for a visit
to the world's most well-known monument, and well-worth its fame: the Taj
Mahal. Built in the memory of his beloved empress by Emperor Shah Jahan, this
marble mausoleum is the greatest gesture of love known to mankind, and is
breathtakingly, bewitchingly beautiful. Land for the building of the Taj Mahal
came from Agra came from the maharaja of Jaipur, and the marble used in its
construction was from the mines of Makrana, also in Rajasthan. The precious
stones used in its inlay, and the craftsmen employed for the twenty-two years
its construction took, came not only from India, but from all over the world.
The Taj Mahal is the perfect finale to your royal sojourn.
Day 08 : Wednesday
You're back in Delhi as early as 06:00 hrs where, after breakfast on board
the train, you descend to the humdrum existence of modern life, with only
royal memories to retain for the rest of your lifetime.
Contact us for Prior Booking at our 24 Hours desk on the following mobile Nos: +91-99428 99555 , 98424 30308 , 99425 87000 . Email Id : info@pearlsindiatour.com ; Fax no:0422 -2331605
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