Be A King For A Day At Chail

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State Himachal Pradesh,India.
Location a wooded retreat at 7,054 ft, 89km from Kalka and 351 km N of Delhi Route from Delhi NH1 to Ambala via Panipat and Karnal; NH22 to Kandaghat via Panchkula, Kalka and Dharampur; state road to Chail via Sadhupul. Tiny Chail does not rival the colonial grandeur of Shimla, but it does give you a feel of how the summer capital of the Raj must have looked before its salubrious environs were chopped down to make way for smug imperial edifices. Chail, of course, boasts of another arrogance, born out of a snub. The town was built after Maharaja Bhupinder Singh of the princely state of Patiala, a handsome ladies man, was banned from Shimla for life by the British, following charges of his making immoral overtures to an Englishwoman. According to historians, the lady in question was Commander-in-Chief Lord Kitcheners daughter, hence the collective moral affront. But the Maharaja got his own back when he built his very own hill station, Chail, at a higher altitude than Shimla. Chail became accessible to tourists after the Patiala royals handed over the 75-acre Chail Palace to the government in 1972.
Its chief attraction is the Palace Hotel, where honeymooning couples and Punjabi businessmen hop in for a day or two of princely excitement. At the height of summer, it is almost impossible to get a foothold here, with tourists, cars, buses and innumerable troops of monkeys roving aggressively around the property.
The rest of the year, one can enjoy the place as the royals felt it.

Best all years round

GETTING THERE
Rail Nearest railhead: Kalka (89 km/2hrs). Taxi charges about $40 return fare to Chail
Road from Delhi take NH1 to Ambala, then NH via Zirakpur to Panchkula. Take the Solan bypass and turn right at Kandaghat to Chail, 29 km away.

Cricket grounds
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 cantonment and as such, is out of bounds to civilians.

Walk the walk
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 over the cedar-forested hills.

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