Mount
Abu is one of the popular jain pilgrimage sites. The road to
paradise has never been easy and this one is no exception. Bumping along an
uneven road, hitting your head against the smooth roof of a deluxe bus you
need to close your eyes and revive the temptations of your destination.
Conjure up the lushness of Mount Abu, which all tourist guides announce is
'the paradise of Rajasthan'.
The
little pamphlet gushes that Mount Abu, the only hill station in Rajasthan,
offers you the best of all possible worlds, with more scenic beauty, more
architecture and archaeology in the form of the famous Dilwara caves, the
chief center for the Brahmakumaris and a generous peppering of temples which
shows that the place is exceptionally favored by the gods. Abu has been an
important place of penance for the sages.
As the anticipation of
the approaching destination heightens one doesn't mind the shaking bus quite
that much and as you turn the final curve into the city, greeted by large
hoardings of different hotels, all promising better deals than the other,
Rajasthan's little jewel puts its best foot forward.
The shops on
both sides of the road are glitteringly alive, as late as 10 p.m. on a
winter night and the residents of Mount Abu mob you in welcome. Well not
exactly the residents it turns out, they are all touts for hotels but they
make you feel welcome. In case it is a winter trip that you are planning,
one can just arrive in Abu, at any time of the night or day, employ a
wheelbarrow, which will take your luggage all over Abu for few rupees while
you check out a place to stay.
This is, in fact the best time to
visit if the cold does not bother you too much (it is usually warmer than a
Delhi winter). All hotels are available at half rates and the best of rooms
can be yours for a rate that suits your budget.
Abu in
summer is definitely a retreat from the heat of the plains. A
summer visit requires careful planning, and rooms should be booked at least
two months in advance. Everything, from hotels to restaurants, to transport
is at double the rates, and beware of the new monster - the Marti's, in
every color which cover the landscape and race pugnaciously around the
hills. Yet, the little township is well prepared to handle tourists. Tourist
buses show you around the places of interest twice a day and the bus guide
provides a background, history and of course his own interpretations on
everything you visit. Information is also available from a tourist guide
office, but even without guidance there are certain places that simply
cannot be missed on a visit to Abu.