I was in Jaipur for around one week attending a conference in LNMIIT as mentioned in the previous post. The city of Jaipur has got tremendous historical importance and the number of monuments in and around the city are still carrying the pride of Jaipur and the kings who ruled there. First of all the whole city is surrounded by hills and on top of the hills you can see various forts and huge walls. The ancient city of Jaipur was slightly away from the main city today and it was surrounded by huge walls. The fort of Amber was simply amazing. The beautiful ceilings inside reminded me of some of those in Vatican museum. It was great to see the Rajasthan Government taking all necessary steps to keep the monuments evergreen. Apart from the this grand fort, the Jalmahal, the Jaigarh fort, the Nahargarh fort, the Hawa mahal, the City Palace were also amazing. Jaipur don't look so good from the point of view of a modern city, but it has got so much historical monuments that no other city in India can probably beat Jaipur. And the interesting fact is that most of the cities in Rajasthan have such huge monuments which make Rajasthan a hot tourist spot in India.
Apart from historical monuments, Rajasthan is famous for wildlife also. Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary and Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve are pretty famous for that. Bharatpur is around 4 hours journey by bus from Jaipur. It's a small town, a bit dirty and unorganized. But the autowala took us to a nice place to stay. It was a part of a person's residence which he gives to tourists on rent. It was pretty close to the gate of the Keoladeo National Park (or Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary) . We went inside the sanctuary twice: we walked on the first day and took bikes for the second day. Although the sanctuary is spread over an area of 30 square kilometer, most of it were unavailable for tourists. Apparently a tiger came out from Ranthambhore national park and entered into some village from where people drove him off to Bharatpur. The authorities are yet to transfer that tiger from Bharatpur to some other national park. People said , it would be done within one week and the entire park will then be open for visitors. We saw a wide varieties of birds there mostly unfamiliar to me. The Siberian Cranes for which the park was very famous at one time, don't come nowadays. According to a guide there, since the Afghan war started, those birds stopped visiting the park since their route to India was over Afghanistan. Apart from birds, there were deers, antilope, wild lizards, jackal and lots of cows, bulls.
Ranthambhore national park is around 190 km from Bharatpur. And there is no good bus service between these two famous tourist destinations. We had to take some pathetic train to reach Sawai Madhopur (which is the district center and very close to Ranthambhore). Sawai Madhopur is again a very small town, but fact that the town has more number of hi-class hotels than shops surprised us a lot. We need to survey a lot to find a room which fits our budget. The Taj Group , the Oberoi group also have hotels over there. And due to high demands from lots of tourists, the prices of rooms were a bit high for Indian grad students ;) Anyway, we managed to find a small tent for us at 600 rupees per night. We took two safaris there, one in the afternoon and one in the morning. Although the afternoon safari went in vain (in the sense that we could not see any tiger), the morning safari made it possible. The guide is the second safari was a bit more experienced than the first one. He followed the warning calls from spotted deer and sambar deer and lead us to spot the tiger. The tiger quietly came and crossed our roads. We felt so lucky to see it in the very second safari, people don't see tiger there even after taking 4-5 safaris. The park is spread over an area of 392 square km and there are only around 30 tigers. So the probability of spotting a tiger in a 3-hour long safari is quite low. Apart from tiger, we saw many birds (which we already saw in Bharatpur), crocodiles, deers, antilope etc.
Apart from historical monuments, Rajasthan is famous for wildlife also. Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary and Ranthambhore Tiger Reserve are pretty famous for that. Bharatpur is around 4 hours journey by bus from Jaipur. It's a small town, a bit dirty and unorganized. But the autowala took us to a nice place to stay. It was a part of a person's residence which he gives to tourists on rent. It was pretty close to the gate of the Keoladeo National Park (or Bharatpur Bird Sanctuary) . We went inside the sanctuary twice: we walked on the first day and took bikes for the second day. Although the sanctuary is spread over an area of 30 square kilometer, most of it were unavailable for tourists. Apparently a tiger came out from Ranthambhore national park and entered into some village from where people drove him off to Bharatpur. The authorities are yet to transfer that tiger from Bharatpur to some other national park. People said , it would be done within one week and the entire park will then be open for visitors. We saw a wide varieties of birds there mostly unfamiliar to me. The Siberian Cranes for which the park was very famous at one time, don't come nowadays. According to a guide there, since the Afghan war started, those birds stopped visiting the park since their route to India was over Afghanistan. Apart from birds, there were deers, antilope, wild lizards, jackal and lots of cows, bulls.
Ranthambhore national park is around 190 km from Bharatpur. And there is no good bus service between these two famous tourist destinations. We had to take some pathetic train to reach Sawai Madhopur (which is the district center and very close to Ranthambhore). Sawai Madhopur is again a very small town, but fact that the town has more number of hi-class hotels than shops surprised us a lot. We need to survey a lot to find a room which fits our budget. The Taj Group , the Oberoi group also have hotels over there. And due to high demands from lots of tourists, the prices of rooms were a bit high for Indian grad students ;) Anyway, we managed to find a small tent for us at 600 rupees per night. We took two safaris there, one in the afternoon and one in the morning. Although the afternoon safari went in vain (in the sense that we could not see any tiger), the morning safari made it possible. The guide is the second safari was a bit more experienced than the first one. He followed the warning calls from spotted deer and sambar deer and lead us to spot the tiger. The tiger quietly came and crossed our roads. We felt so lucky to see it in the very second safari, people don't see tiger there even after taking 4-5 safaris. The park is spread over an area of 392 square km and there are only around 30 tigers. So the probability of spotting a tiger in a 3-hour long safari is quite low. Apart from tiger, we saw many birds (which we already saw in Bharatpur), crocodiles, deers, antilope etc.
Area-wise Rajathan is the largest state in India, and of course it's not possible to cover everything within just few days. There are many more interesting places like Jaisalmer, Jodhpur, Bikaner, Ajmer which we could not cover. Will have to plan some trip again to this awesome Indian state in near future :)
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