Gujarat Travel Guide

The
most convenient entry point into Gujarat is through the metropolis of
Ahmedabad.
The city contains some very fine museums, the Calico Museum of Textiles
being considered among the worlds finest. Ahmedabads walled city
is a living testimony to its heritage of crafts as women walk by in dazzling
embroidered garments and flashing ethnic silver jewellery. Traditional Ahmedabad
combines mosques of inspired workmanship, wooden Jain temples, unique stone
stepwells and houses with ornately carved wooden balconies and window screens.
Modern Ahmedabad, just across the River Sabarmati spanned by four bridges, is
a showpiece of contemporary architecture with designs by Le Corbusier, Louis
Kahn and the best known Indian architects. Ahmedabad is a convenient base for
a number of excursions, Modhera being the best known. 106 km away, this is one
of the very few sun temples in the country.
Palitana, 215 km away, is a hilltop place of pilgrimage for Jains. 863
temples of all sizes crowd the hilll which has to be approached on foot. Stone
and marble spires with their rich detail of carving make for Palitanas
very special appeal. Portuguese rule in India included the territories of Goa,
Daman and
Diu, the last two lying within the state of Gujarat.
Gujarats loveliest beach and the state is well endowed with them
is
Ahmedpur Mandvi whose chief attraction is the ethnic beach
resort. Cottages modelled on rural Gujarati architecture look out onto a secluded
beach, one of the states chief centres for water sports.