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Delight and discovery in India's finest city

Mysore has to be India's finest city. No other place can match its inexhaustible stock of palaces, its broad spotless avenues and its palpable link with its past. Unlike cities like Delhi and Jaipur, Mysore's past is not restricted to monuments and ruins. Its past is alive and well, lovingly maintained and enjoyed to the full.

As a city rife with tourists, tourist guides and tourist information, it is easy to know exactly what to do and when. For example, Sunday evenings are a must at the city palace. At seven each Sunday evening, the palace bursts into a blaze of gold in a spectacular light display.

Visits to the nearby Chamundi Hills, to see the black-stone Nandi peaceably chewing the cud must be planned for the evening. Then there is the Lalitha Mahal Palace Hotel, which must be visited at night if you wish to suffer the food and service, but still savour the experience of eating in a real palace.

It is worth visiting the elephants at the zoo, worth shopping for sandalwood, worth eating Andhra food at RR in the town centre. In short, worth it.

Accommodation is plentiful, ranging from palaces to hovels. But the best accommodation by far, is the Hotel Metropole. Luxuriously old-world, with a charm and feel that are truly rare to find, this place is every bit worth it. Air-conditioned doubles cost about Rs 1,200, though cheaper non-AC rooms are also available. The building was built as the maharaja's guesthouse. Which means that wide airy balconies, bathtubs, dressing rooms, four poster beds, silver tea service and other such good things in life are included.

Our next destination was the Kabini River Lodge at Nagarhole. About 80 km south-west of Mysore, on the leeward side of the Western Ghats lie the forests of this elephant sanctuary. The Kabini Lodge has beautifully designed bungalows, set around a reservoir at the edge of the forest. It is one of those places where everything is taken care of, at a price. Rs 1,500 a head per night includes a room, all meals and morning and evening jeep safaris into the forest.

The sanctuary itself is rich in wildlife. Elephants of all sizes, herds of elephants, lone adolescent male elephants fending for themselves, baby elephants being pampered, tuskers protecting their females, elephants galore. For the most part, the elephants we encountered were engaged in the single minded pursuit of food, which was quite appealing. Either they were grazing on grassy meadows, or they were uprooting trees and ripping off branches as a variation. They were having a good time, and we had a good time watching them.

There are wild boars, bison and deer as well, several of them. Fortunately, no one primes you for seeing a tiger, so you don't spend the entire safari with your eyes straining for the sight of one - which is just as well, because they are hardly spotted. But the attraction here is undoubtedly the elephants and birds. Evidently, there are thousands of bird species at Nagarhole, and it is a bird-watcher's paradise. To get a closer look, there are coracle rides arranged in the river every morning, passing flocks of birds and, if you are destined, hungry crocodiles.

Back Coorg and Madikeri

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