To See & Do
Tiny Chail does not have a Mall, just a huddle of shops. It's leisurely walks in summer and autumn, fun in the powder snow in winters. Spread over three hills Pandhawa, Rajgarh and Siddh Tibba Chail is ideal for picnics and short treks.
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Pilgrim?s progress |
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Faith has three faces in Chail. The most important in this former dominion of Patiala is the Gurudwara Sahib, built in 1907. Located 1 km above Chail?s bazaar, on Pandhawa Hill, the yellow distemper-covered gurudwara is a small building with a tiny courtyard. The two tower-like structures fitted into the fa?ade flanking the main entrance enhance the air of austerity reminiscent of some churches in Goa.
Siddh-Baba-ka-Mandir is situated on the hill sandwiched by Rajgarh and Pandhawa. Set in the army cantonment area, the temple sits next to the cricket grounds (currently being used by the Army). It is a simple, traditional structure that bears witness to the obstinate but holy ascetic of legend. The temple is roughly equidistant from Chail Palace and the bazaar (approximately 4 km).
The third temple is the Kali-ka-Tibba, located on the top of the hill named after the Rajmata?s cottage, Blossom. One can see the Choor Chandni Peak and the Shivalik Range from here. It?s an easy 6-km trek from the bazaar via the Gauda road.
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Born to be wild |
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Stretching from the Krishna River to Giriganga is a small wildlife sanctuary, which includes roughly 200 small villages besides the wild langur, leopards, Indian brown bear, hogs, deer (ghoral, sambhar), goats and wild pheasant (including the endangered kaleej). It is one of the few notified regions in the state where humans and wild beasts live side by side.
According to forest officials here, one can spot the wildlife on the way to Kali-ka-Tibba and Gauda, besides the stretch between Chail Palace and Janerghat. To do so, however, they advise you get up early and take your position latest by 5 am. For angling, head for the Giriganga River (29 km from Chail on the Gauda road) ? but be prepared for small catch only. Keen anglers, however, should remember, the trout is only an occasional visitor here.
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Cricket grounds |
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The famed cricket grounds laid down by the Maharaja of Patiala ? some say the highest in the world at 7,218 ft ? is situated in the cantonment and, as such, is out of bounds to civilians.
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Walk the walk |
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Chail is all about walking in pairs, with sticks and hands otherwise empty ? that is, if you wish to avoid the marauding monkeys, who are not averse to attacking walkers on a whim. Treks to Shimla and Kandaghat take you along village shortcuts, whereas the trek to Choor Chandni requires a two-day march to the base camp at Hamirpurghat (roughly 80 km from Gauda via Rajgarh).
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Content Source:
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by:
Charu Soni
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