On our first visit to that part of the world, India delighted and amazed us.
India is a vast country, and rather than trying to do a broad survey, we decided to focus on the "golden triangle" of Delhi, Jaipur, and Agra, although we extended it into more of a "golden decagon", doing a more extensive exploration of the state of Rajasthan, an area rich in UNESCO World Heritage sites as well as natural beauty and cultural interest.
Air Connections
Our itinerary began and ended in Delhi, which simplified flights as Delhi is very well connected. India is pretty much the other side of the world from LA, so going east or west are both options. On advice from Indian friends, we chose to go round trip on Qatar Air connecting through Doha, and we splurged for business class "Q suites" with the lie-flat seats, which made the 15-hour plus 4-hour flights bearable.
New Delhi (3 nights)
Our hotel in Delhi, the Leela Palace,
was probably our nicest hotel of the trip.
Definitely 5-star modern luxury, with modern well-appointed "business class" hotel rooms,
with a beautifully decorated lobby looking out onto a garden with a large Buddha statue,
and other richly decorated common areas. There were several excellent restaurants.
This was a fantastic first place to land and recalibrate after our long flight.
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Day 1 - Arrival in Delhi
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Day 2 - Delhi: Qutb Minar, Lotus Temple, Humayun's Tomb
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Day 3 - Delhi: Akshardham, Lodi Gardens, Gurdwara Bangla Sahib
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Jodhpur (2 nights)
The Taj Hari Mahal is a modern hotel with very comfortable rooms with all of the modern amenities. The staff were all very attentive as you'd expect at a Taj (a high-end Indian hotel group). The hotel had a decent restaurant and a very good gift shop. The location is short driving distance to most of the attractions, but nothing you would walk to.
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Day 4 - Jodhpur: the blue city
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Day 5 - Jodhpur: Jaswant Thada royal cenotaphs, Mehrangarh Fort/Palace
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Narlai (1 night)
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Day 6 - Narlai: Leopard safari
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Udaipur (3 nights)
The Jagat Niwas Palace is a 17th century haveli (mansion) on four floors arranged around a courtyard, situated with beautiful views over Lake Pichola (the hotel is right on the water). The restaurant and bar were on lakeside upper floors, making the most of the serene lake views. We upgraded to suites here, and the rooms were very spacious, comfortable, and with modern amenities. The location was ideal, not only for the views, but just a short walk to the Jagdish Temple, the City Palace, and lots of scenic ghats (steps down to the water), shops, and more. Highly recommended.
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Day 7 - Kumbhalgarh Fort, Ranakpur Jain Temple en route to Udaipur
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Day 8 - Udaipur: Jagdish Temple, City Palace
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Day 9 - Udaipur: the lake city
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Bundi (1 night)
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Day 10 - Chittorgarh en route to Bundi
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Sawai Madhopur (3 nights)
The Zana Forest Resort in the city of Sawai Madhopur was our base for doing safaris in Ranthambore National Park. It's a new property, open for less than a year when we stayed. The rooms are all freestanding cottages, with an extremely spacious and comfortable main room and nice modern bathroom. We were grateful for an actual built-in heater that could heat the whole room. The dining room was generic and basic, with an adequate buffet, but staff that went above and beyond to be accommodating.
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Day 11 - Bundi: Royal cenotaphs, Queen's stepwell, Bundi Palace / Taragarh Fort
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Days 12-13 - Ranthambore Tiger Reserve
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Jaipur (3 nights)
The Narain Niwas Palace is a luxury heritage hotel in a secluded garden setting hidden in the midst of urban Jaipur. The rooms have traditional decor elements but thoroughly modern comforts. The lobby and common spaces are sumptuous. Peacocks parade around the garden courtyards. The in-hotel restaurant is very good, and there's also a trendy Italian restaurant adjacent to the property. There are some nice shopping arcades in walking just outside the grounds.
(est $150/night)
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Day 14 - Jaipur: the pink city
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Day 15 - Jaipur: Amer Fort, Elephant Camp, Jantar Mantar and City Palace
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Day 16 - Jaipur: Block printing, carpet weaving, evening at Chokhi Dhani
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Suroth (1 night)
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Day 17 - Abhaneri Stepwell, Suroth Mahal
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Bharatpur (1 night)
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Day 18 - Bharatpur: Keoladeo Bird Reserve
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Agra (1 night)
The Grand Mercure was our hotel for our 1 night in Agra. It had just been bought by Accor and changed names literally days before we arrived. It's a large tall modern hotel with clean modern comfortable rooms, like a Marriott or Crowne Plaza, solid quality but fairly generic in character. The breakfast buffet was fine, but can get pretty crowded at peak hours. (est $100/night)
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Day 19 - Fatehpur Sikri, Taj Mahal
![]() ![]() We’d been in India for nearly three weeks, and encountering beautiful and amazing things every single day, and worried our capacity for astonishment might be wearing down by the time we got to the Taj Mahal near the end of the trip. But then we saw it, and were in awe. It is truly magnificent. For those last golden hours of a perfect day, as the setting sun bathed the white marble in its glow, catching occasional glints of light from the gilding and semi-precious stones, we marveled at its incomparable beauty. |
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New Delhi (3+ nights)
The Ambassador Hotel is a gem of Moderne architecture in the heart of New Delhi. Not only the architecture, but the interior decor — doors, carpets, guest room furniture — is delightfully Moderne. Our room had a number of great wood furniture pieces that looked like they could have been bought at the 1930 Expo. The room was spacious, and the bathroom was thoroughly modern. The location was great, a short walk to Khan Market, and not much further to Lodi Gardens, and close to everything else. A bonus is that a very good tailor has a tiny shop off the lobby, where you can pick out fabric and have shirts made. The hotel restaurant (inexplicably called The Yellow Brick Road) is merely adequate, but nothing special, and it wouldn't attract anyone from outside the hotel to dine there. But that's less important when you can walk to restaurants at Khan Market, or take a short taxi to any number of excellent places. On balance, we would definitely recommend the hotel. (est $120/night)
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Day 20 - Agra Fort, drive to Delhi
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Day 21 - Old Delhi: Chandni Chowk market, Jama Masjid mosque
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Day 22 - New Delhi: National Museum, shopping, lunch at The Imperial
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Day 23 - Head Home
Our flight departed Delhi at 3:30am, and our hotel had been arranged for an very late check-out, so we were able to finish our final packing after dinner. We returned the same route as we had come, Qatar Air with a 4-hour flight to Doha, a 2-hour connection, and then the 16-hour flight home. We definitely appreciated the lie-flat "Q suites" we had in Qatar's business class, where we could change into pajamas and lie down and sleep. With the time change, we departed Doha at 8am and arrived to LAX at 1pm. With an afternoon to unpack, and a slightly earlier than usual crash to bed that evening, the jet lag wasn't too bad.
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Reflections and Recommendations
Overall, we were very happy with this trip. We would definitely recommend Pink Vibgyor as a travel agent to book a custom trip. They do fully organized group tours as well, but for more independent-minded people like us, they also do completely custom arrangements. We gave them an outline of places we wanted to see, and they built an itinerary around that, with suggestions about places in between so that no day was too long a drive. We had a good back and forth about the sorts of hotels we wanted to stay in (we generally stayed in "heritage hotels" like old palaces, though some more modern hotels too). It was definitely the way to go to have a private car and driver for a trip like this (although we did meet one intrepid couple who was getting everywhere on Uber, even between cities).
About Suroth
Suroth is the one leg of our itinerary that I would conditionally recommend, as it may not be for everybody. Logistically, it could easily be skipped as you could just go from Abhaneri straight to Bharatpur in about the same driving time. The positive: we had a unique experience of a rural village, staying in a heritage palace where the descendants of the local royal family still live. The palace, while much smaller in scale than the palaces of Jodhpur or Udaipur, was definitely a palace with rich history and ornate construction and decor. You will meet the son of the current raja, who is very sociable and is happy to tell you about the village, the hotel, the royal family history, and life as a Rajput (Indian royalty). He's also the only one there who speaks much English. The bedrooms were charming and comfortable, furnished with traditional antique furnishings. The one off-putting aspect was the bathroom. While there was hot and cold running water, a sink, a tub, and a toilet, it was all very basic, even shabby. The fixtures are so old and worn, they would look dirty even when clean. There was a large bucket and a scoop, which we ended up using to bucket-bathe in the curtainless tub. So that's the trade-off you make. On balance, I personally found the overall experience worthwhile and would selectively recommend it to those who would accept some shortcomings for an otherwise positive experience you won't find elsewhere.
Notes On Timing
Overall, January was a good choice for this part of India. Our days were mostly in the 60s and a few in the lower 70s, and no rain, so quite comfortable, even a bit cooler than we expected. The nights got colder than we were quite prepared for, down to 50 or even 40s. Bring a puffy jacket, you'll wear it in evenings. It's important to note that most of the year India is uncomfortably hot, so hotels are generally more prepared to cool than to heat. Our one real discomfort was sometimes having rooms that were too cold. They almost always could provide a plug-in space heater, and sometimes those worked fine, but there were a couple of occasions where a plug-in space heater just wasn't going to get the room warm. Consider bringing winter pajamas, and definitely bring slippers (nearly all the nice hotels will have marble floors which are beautiful and cool in summer but cold in winter!). November or February are probably even better, or possibly March depending on your temperature sensitivity. (March also offers the bonus of being there for Holi, the holiday of colors.)
Notes On Tigers
I'd read that May (which is definitely very hot) is the best time to insure you'll see a tiger, because there are only a few sources of water then and so you just wait there. Our experience in January is that we saw a tiger on one of our three safaris, and just chatting with other tourists we met, we heard reports of 2 out of 3, 1 out of 1, and 0 out of 1, so I think if seeing a tiger is really important to you, you should plan three safaris (they run morning and evening, so that's a day and a half to do three).
Notes On Cost
For two of us, excluding international airfare and souvenirs/purchases, we spent a total of $14,400 for our vacation in India, including lodging, food, private car and driver (shared with two others for most of the trip), guides, local transport (including air connections within India), and tips, which is about $600/day for the two of us. The bulk of that ($12,436) went to our travel agent who arranged all of our hotels, transport (including private car and driver), and some meals, so it's not really possible for us to break that down into separate costs for lodging, etc. The international air was $12,500 for the two of us on business class (Qatar Air "Q Suites") from LAX to Delhi round trip. I can say that things are generally quite inexpensive in India from our American perspective. Dinner at a Michelin-level tasting menu restaurant in one of the top hotels in Delhi cost $216 for two of us. Eating in the hotel is relatively more expensive. When we ate at outside restaurants, we had good meals for $40 for two (or maybe $60 in Delhi which has bigger city prices).