After moving to Ahmedabad in July 2018, the weekend getaway options have severely reduced. Especially the type of options my wife and I like i.e. mountains. The nearest hill-station is Mount Abu and for a person who has grown up travelling to Himachal, it’s like the first stop at Dharampur for food. (No disrespect to Abu and its fans)
Uttarayan (Jan 14) was a long weekend so we (my wife and I) decided to make a short trip to Rann of Kutch. While checking for stay options, I found a resort in Dholavira which was absolutely middle of nowhere and had the white Rann right behind it. The images and the limited reviews available online seemed positive so booked it for two nights.
Day 1
I had a late day in office on Friday so slept quite late thus couldn’t leave before 10 AM on Saturday. I was told the traffic and road conditions (because of a lot of speed-breakers) is bad till Sanand but it wasn’t too bad that day. Yes, there are some 10-12 speed breakers at every 200 meters but apart from that, this road is very good. Being a state-highway till Khirai where it joins NH 27 (numbers keep changing so not sure what it will be when you are reading it) there are no tolls but the road surface and planning (bypass all towns) is just amazing. It took us about 5 hours 30 minutes including a 30 minutes break.
The resort owner had called us around 11 to check whether we will have lunch. We thought we will get some options on the road thus refused. Dholavira is not a very popular tourist destination (more on it later) thus we couldn’t find any decent place to stop after Chitrod. So the only meal we had was breakfast at 11 AM in a place called Iscon Food Mall which only had Fafda and vada pav. We reached around 3.30 PM and the resort had run out of lunch. They prepare fresh food for the number of guests they have so we had to be contented with Maggi.
We booked standard rooms as the AC rooms were sold out. I feel the rooms were a bit small and didn’t offer any view from the room. I spoke to the owner who turned out to be a very nice person. He is the taluka head of that region and has a lot of knowledge about the region and its history. City dwelling has made most of us quite cynical and it’s moments and places like these which make us realise that there still are nice people around. Our rooms were changed to deluxe rooms with a view of rann. I negotiated the difference in price and checked in to the larger room with view and sit-out.
It was quite windy in Dholavira so the weather was quite pleasant in the evening. We just rested for the day and went for dinner around 8.30 PM. Food was as simple and delicious as it can get. Basic khichdi, Kadhi, some sabzi. The beauty of that place is no television and a very limited network. So, one can really enjoy nature, star gazing, and the company of family/friends.
Day 2
The following day was an early start as we wanted to catch the sunrise. Heard symphony of birds after ages. In cities, we only get to see pigeons which also has something against our beloved cars. Here, we could see all types of birds and the most special to me was – sparrows. I couldn’t even recollect the last time I had seen a sparrow, something which used to be a normal feature during childhood.
We stepped out and saw a jeep leaving for the sunrise point. We asked the resort owner if our car can make it to that point (an island in the salt field). He said it’s complete off-roading and the car won’t make it. He perhaps, sensed the disappointment in our faces while we were walking around and thinking how lovely it would have been to take Crusoe to the salt fields. The resort owner walked up to me and said let me take you to the field through another route. He took us to this off-road section behind the resort. I was nervous if Crusoe would make it and what if we get stuck? It was loose sand. He asked me to keep the momentum and not brake. Within 500 meters we were on the solid salt-fields. Finally, the dream of taking Crusoe to the salt-field came true.
We spent an hour there, clicking pics and soaking in the view. We returned around 8 and had a basic breakfast. We left for excavation site of Dholavira at around 11 AM. Dholavira is said to be the most modern/developed city during the Indus Valley Civilization. The way the water conservation was planned during that era is mind-boggling. The details about the Metropolis of Dholavira can be read in
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dholavira and other online sources. Let me share what a very interesting guide told me.
I was sitting near the entrance to the Citadel and just observing the entire site when one of the guides walked up and started talking to me. He said that he used to work in ASI and after the excavation work stopped in 2005, he stayed back in Dholavira because of the attachment he had formed to that place. He explained the apathy towards Dholavira by authorities and public. Most people turn back from the parking or at best visiting the museum near the entry. There has hardly been any funding since 2005 and there are more areas marked for excavation, but the work has never started. It’s a place that’s hiding a link to our (mankind’s) glorious past yet it’s ignored by all.
We returned around 2.30 PM and had another basic and delicious lunch. We spoke to the resort manager (son of the owner) and booked a trip to the island on their jeep (Rs 2000 for the trip). We left for the island at around 4.30 PM and it was a 30 minutes’ drive through very bad roads and a lot of dust. The experience in that island and beyond it was truly amazing. We saw deer, wild ass (from distance) and just vastness. The salt-fields on the other side of the island was as vast as the horizon. We were the only people till as far as we could see. We waited till the sunset to catch it on the horizon and then returned. While it’s a basic experience but the feeling of vastness and being in the middle of nowhere is too precious for us city-dwellers. We returned at around 7.30 PM and later had similar ghee infused delicious food.
Day 3
Next morning after breakfast, we just sat outside our room and observed the birds and listened to their symphony for hours. Finally, we got ready and checked out around 12 PM. A guy who was staying in the resort asked for a lift to the nearest town with a bus stop and had an interesting conversation with him during the journey. He (in a nutshell) lives to travel and does it in a shoestring budget. Just spends on his gadgets and travel, in fact, hitches a ride as much as possible. Works in resorts/hotels to arrange for the stay and is living his passion in this manner. Here’s his Instagram profile if anyone wants to follow.
https://www.instagram.com/traveller_babu/?hl=en
After dropping him at Rapar, we were thinking about a place for lunch. In this trip, we had only eaten simple vegetarian food so I was craving for some fancy food. Travelling for me is as much about food as it is about the journey. We checked that there’s a Radisson in Kandla and it will be a detour of about two hours. The roads were just fantastic from Chitrod to Kandla and it took us much lesser time than what Google suggested. We had a nice and relaxed lunch and then started for Ahmedabad at around 4 PM.
Kandla to Ahmedabad is so good that we managed it in less than four hours including a stop at CCD (Dhrangadhra) and a couple of tolls. We could manage decent speeds without being rash or careless, that’s how good the state highways in Gujarat (especially this stretch) are. We were at home before 8 PM and could rest properly before getting back to work the next day.
This short but relaxing trip really helped us connect with each other better because there’s no distraction of technology or television there. For a change, we were talking instead of binging on some show or movies. The ignored excavation site, the vastness of Rann, the simple people, homemade regional food, singing of birds, and our magnificent steed (Crusoe) made this trip very special.
Some pics from the trip (clicked from my S9 and wife’s Pixel) are in the following posts. We didn’t bother to take the camera out. Go-pro and webcam had some footage of the road but pretty much ordinary. Nothing exceptional except a glance of a Nilgai that jumped across the road.
Thank you for reading!!!