Sunday
Sep212014
Sightseeing Marathon - The forts of Jaipur
Sunday, September 21, 2014 at 11:32PM
The last post on Jaipur trip is linked here...
Day 3 of our trip was entirely spent close to Jaipur City. We saw so many sights and I took so many photographs for one day that this day's events have to be broken into two parts.
We started early in the morning and went to see the Jal Mahal (Water palace). It was nice, given we were not allowed to go to it on the boat. We took a few "profile pictures" and moved on to go up the mountain range to see the first of three forts around Jaipur.
Camels greeted us in the roadsides
The place had hundreds of dressed up camels that were used by the locals as transportation, be it pulling carts or as vehicles themselves. Cows: Banaras :: Camels : Jaipur, when it comes to animals mingling with traffic on roads.
The Jal Mahal was not picture perfect in the morning given the bland background and backlighting. So we planned to get back to it on another day or hope for better shots in the evening.
The views of the city were great as we moved up towards Jaigarh fort.
The fort had an impressive water tank that made it secure with respect to its water needs. The entire thing had walls with slotted windows where marksmen would line up to shoot intruders, or so we were told by our guide.
The fort also is home to the worlds largest cannon!
Four elephants were requried to manouver the cannon and given that only one test shot was fired and that was enough to scare everyone away, this might have been a precursor to atomic bomb testing when it came to the logic of "lets just show everyone how scary this is and no one will dare attack us".. a logic that goes bad pretty quickly as someone else comes up with a different weapon in a few hundred years!
The walls of this fort run through the perimeter of the hills. Very impressive given it was built almost 400 years ago for a place that did not have any threats at the time it was built.
We wandered around the fort walls and turrets and got to see the valley views.
Right now the fort is home to a few tens of thousands of pidgeons! They were everywhere.
The views from the walls was just amazing!
After seeing this fort we went to see another fort, the Nahargarh fort. Nahar apparently means Tiger, but that had nothing to do with the naming as there was some backstory to this fort. It was pitched to us as a fort which was to keep the queens secure in times of war.
This one had really impressive views of the entire Jaipur City as well as the valley below. The queens had it made, as long as their king was alive. If he died, they were either burnt alive with his body or had to go queen with the new king. Not so great, as far as options went. It was not like they could get a pension and live their life.
The entrance was impressive once we got to the top of the mountain.
The bikes provided a much needed time warp for this picture!
You walk into a courtyard and there are rooms for the queens on either side. There were way too many queens for one king and the kids were like "What the hell? I want to see who this idiot was who thought he could manage that many women!"
We got to walk through three floors of the palace all the way to the rooftop to get a view of the City! Guess that if you are a king and you can do whatever you want with taxpayer $ or Rupees or whatever the hell currency he had, you get to build things like this!
Every square inch of the surface was a work of art! This forting business must have been good for the local economy, employment etc. Maybe that was one reason for building these things, much like how we build unncessary Tanks and Military equipment that no one is asking for in places where there are no other jobs.
After catching a view of Jaipur city from every side, we started driving down to the Amer (Amber) Palace or Fort. They mixed it up w.r.t. calling it Amer or Amber and Fort or Palace. Guess it was both. By the time we reached level ground, we were hungry. Our tour guide suggested we eat first and then see the Amer palace, but we wanted to finish off everything one shot.
What we saw at the Amer fort was nothing short of spectacular. That will be part 2 of this post..
I really wanted to finish the Jaipur travelog before August and the Golu season, but there are still a few hundred photos to edit. The international travel disrupts posting. Will have to figure out a way to get VPN going so I can edit posts from hotel rooms in Asia.
Another day, another post. On the plus side, it is good to be back in the US with the wife and kids again!
tagged HDR, India, Jaipur, Palace, canon 17-40Lmm L, canon EOS 5d mark ii, forts, high dynamic range, india trip, photoblog, sightseeing, travel in HDR, India, Rajasthan, adventure, photoblog, photography
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