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Adventure destinations
Ideal Destinations
The Adventure Company offers over 250 activity holidays to many destinations spanning every continent. We have many perfect destinations for your adventure travel, whatever your needs
Family Holidays
- Family Holidays - why we're first for adventure
- Single Parent Family Holidays
- Teen Family Adventures – adventurous trips
- Young Family Adventures – easy going trips
- Family Adventures – trips for children 5-12 yrs
- Photographic Family Holidays
- Family Activity Holidays - for children 5-12 yrs
Featured private group holidays
Private Groups
Fancy one of our fantastic adventures but only want to travel with people you know? Do it your way as a private group. We make private group trips for everyone, from big families to scouts and cadets.
Holiday Types
- Activity Holidays – all action adventure
- Cultural Tours – lost cities & local life
- Wildlife Holidays – global wildlife encounters
- Trekking Holidays – peaks & summits
- Hands On Trips – conservation & your help
- Collection Trips – added comfort & style
- Astronomy Tours – eclipses & stargazing
- Expedition Cruises – polar experiences
- Photographic Holidays - photos for families
- Charity Holidays - do something amazing
- School Trips - exciting school trips abroad
- Northern Lights Tours - aurora borealis
- Private Groups - Create your own group
Feature adventure holidays
Solo Traveller
We’ve developed a range of dedicated solo holidays & solo travel packages; exclusively for people booking on their own. Around 40% of all our passengers are solo travellers.
Rajasthan Teen Adventure
Transport - Minibus, on foot, train, horse, in country flight.
Accommodation - Hotel (9nts), desert camp (1nt).
Meals - 10 breakfasts, 1 lunch, 1 dinner.
We often have multiple itineraries so please check to see which itinerary is suitable for you, by selecting the relevant tab.
- (2013-14)

Trip starts Delhi
Arrive at your hotel in New Delhi. The present metropolis of Delhi is at least the eighth city to have been founded on this site; its predecessors have been largely razed to the ground. This afternoon you’ll be introduced to India with a guided tour, to help get the best possible introduction to the country. The network of narrow streets and alleys of Old Delhi serves as the symbolic heart of this magnificent city. You’ll visit the city’s largest mosque, Jami Masjid (Friday mosque). Not only is it a place of religious worship, but also a lively meeting place for the city’s Muslims and a fascinating insight into the way of life in the city. You’ll travel by local transport, the rickshaw (own expense), to ply your way through the crowds and down to the impressive Red Fort.
Swati Deluxe Hotel - 1 night (B)
You will receive full details of exactly where to meet your Group Leader on the Joining Instructions which will be ent to you 2-3 weeks before your trip starts. For information on when the trip ends please refer to the itinerary as described below.

Delhi & Udaipur
This morning, you’ll start with a tour of New Delhi, where the wide boulevards and imposing buildings conjure up images of the British Empire at its zenith. The Lutyen’s designed Rashtrapati (formerly the Viceregal’s Lodge) is particularly impressive, whilst India Gate is one of the city’s most iconic memorials. You’ll also visit Raj Ghat, the site of Mahatma Ghandi’s cremation, now marked by a black marble plinth and memorial gardens, a sombre reminder of this great figure. You’ll leave the hotel by midday in order to catch the early afternoon flight south to Udaipur. Udaipur is sometimes called the ‘Venice of the East’, with its beautiful lakes and grandiose palaces that line the shore, an oasis in the otherwise stark and arid state of Rajasthan. It’s a short transfer fro the city’s small airport to your centrally located hotel.
Lake Pichola - 2 nights (Bx2)
Exploring Udaipur
You have a whole day today to explore Udaipiur and the surrounding countryside. This morning you’ll take a guided tour of the town’s main sights, leaving the afternoon free to explore further afield or simply relax by the tranquil lakeside. Founded in 1568, the City Palace dominates the lake and the old town. You’ll visit the City Palace, now a museum, where the views over the lake and the Jag Niwas ‘floating palace’ are spectacular. Head down here for sunset for spectacular views. In the centre of the old town the ornately carved Jagdish Mandir is a classic example of a Hindu Temple, with some particularly impressive carved figures decorating its walls.
Udaipur is famed for its tie-and-dye fabrics and the fine miniature paintings of the Mewar School. Its bazaars and shops are fascinating to wander around and it’s not unusual to come face to face with an elephant as you explore the narrow lanes and streets. During your afternoon here you have free time to enjoy some optional activities (addition charge). You can chose to take a short cruise on Lake Pichola, stopping off to visit the temple on Jag Mandir Island. Alternatively you can hire a bicycle, or take a taxi out of town to visit the complex of 108 temples at Eklingi, the oldest of which is dedicated to Shiva and dates from the 8th century. At nearby Nagda there are decorative 10th century temples with wonderful carvings and elaborate friezes. In the evenings the sunsets are spectacular, as the changing colours of the sun wash over the Lake Pichola and this most romantic of cities. (B)

Jojawar
This morning you head south into the wilds of the Rajasthani desert, a journey of about 3-4 hours. After a quick stop for tea, you begin your horse safari into the wilderness of Rajasthan. This ride will take you out into the Aravalli hills and you will be able to see a more straightforward way of life as you follow desert paths through one of India's last frontiers. The first night you camp out under the stars and can listen to the sounds of the desert all around you. Life in the desert is more traditional and will give you a glimpse into how India might have been many years ago.
The horse riding is suitable for novices, although if you prefer not to ride, you can travel in one of the support vehicles that will travel with the horses to the camp. The accommodation at the camp is set up with good bedding and high tea served, a reminder of India's past.
Camp (CS) - 1 night (BLD)
Jojawar village
After a good night's sleep in the camp, wake up refreshed and return to Jojawar village itself on horseback. On arrival in Jojawar you will head to your accommodation in a local fort. This 'Rawla', meaning abode of the local chieftain, is the most impressive sight and dominates the whole town. From here, you will take a walk throughout the surrounding village, giving you the chance to get closer to Indian society. The people in the village live in isolated hamlets and homesteads. Here they still practise old professions such as sheep and camel herding. This is a fascinating insight into a culture that has survived over the centuries
Rawla Joiawar Heritage Hotel (AAAA) - 1 night - Swimming Pool (B)

Traditional train ride; Pushkar
This morning you leave Jojawar behind, and take an old train over the Kambi Ghat pass to the highest station on the Aravalli range. This is a local gauge train down through the mountains, with panoramic views of the scrub jungle, remote hill stations and one hundred foot high bridges. You will be able to experience rural life at its best during this incredible journey. Train travel has for years been the best way to get across India, and railway tracks crisscross Rajasthan. The train provides much needed resources to some of the most far flung corners. You return to the hotel by jeep in time for your lunch. In the afternoon, you drive across to Pushkar, one of the five Dhams or pilgrimages held in high esteem by Hindus. Pushkar itself is surrounded by lakes, and you will notice the landscape change from barren desert to a more verdant green. The lakes that surround Pushkar are said to have been formed after a battle in which the Lord Brahma killed the demon Vajra Nabh with a lotus flower, whose petals floated down to earth and landed in three places in and around Pushkar where lakes sprang up. According to legend, Pushkar Lake was surrounded by 500 temples and 52 palaces in years gone by.
Pushkar Fort - 1 night (B)

Bramha temple, Pushkar sightseeing
Today you can visit one of these five hundred temples. The Savitiri temple sits on a hill overlooking the town, and provides excellent views over the lake below (additional charge). Later this morning you visit the Bramha temple, one of the few temples dedicated to Bramha in all of India, the deity who was cursed so that he would only be worshipped in Pushkar. The bright colours and fascinating architecture of the temple make this one of the most interesting sites in Rajasthan. Your journey continues as you make your way by road to Jaipur.
Bissau Palace - 2 nights (Bx2)

Jaipur sightseeing
After a few nights out in the desert, you return to the hustle and bustle of Jaipur, one of India's busiest cities. Like Delhi, Jaipur has both an old and a new part to the city, and you’ll spend most time in the old city. The streets are busy with camels and bullock-carts, and above it all monkeys make their home in the old city walls. After time to freshen up after your journey, you’ll take a city tour to see some of Jaipur’s most celebrated and impressive sights. You’ll head to the City Palace and the famous Palace of the Winds; here royal maidens once watched the streets below. They were able to see without being seen, due to the fabulous jali (lattice screens) which hid them from prying male eyes. Today snake-charmers and fortune-tellers ply their trade below the same hideaway. Close by is the 18th century Jantar Mantar, an astronomical observatory built by the city’s founder Jai Singh who, having a passion for the science, built five such wonders in major cities all over the north. (B)

Amber Fort
Perched on a hill some 11km from Jaipur, and nestling among the Aravalli Hills, is the historic fort-palace of Amber. You reach the palace along a twisting road that passes Maota Lake before turning uphill, past the elephant stables, to Jai Pol or ‘Victory Gate’. This is the ancient capital of the Kachhawaha Rajputs who gave their loyalty to Moghul overlords. From the spoils of war they gradually built a fabulous complex of royal rooms that today make up the Amber Fort. Today they remain lavishly decorated with murals, jali-work and scalloped niches that once held candles to reflect the soft light from tiny mirrors, embedded in eggshell plaster. You can thoroughly explore the site and village opposite, perhaps taking an elephant ride (optional). This afternoon you drive to Agra, via the palaces and mosques of Fatehpur Sikri.
Raj Mahal - 1 night (B)
Agra & Taj Mahal
No matter how many times you’ve seen it, watching the reflections of light gradually wash over the Taj continues to have a fresh impact. Early this morning, just as the city begins to wake you’ll make the short journey by auto rickshaw to the gates of the Taj Mahal. The Taj was built as a mausoleum for Shah Jahan’s beloved wife, Mumtaz, after she died giving birth to their fourteenth child, and must surely be the world’s greatest monument to love. Architects from as far afield as Europe were commissioned to take part in its creation. At first glance, the Taj appears to be simply white marble, but closer inspection reveals that the surface is inlaid with a profusion of semi-precious stones, which form stylised flowers and bowers. Words fail to do it justice - only a visit can show you its exquisite beauty.
No matter how many times you’ve seen it, watching the reflections of light gradually wash over the Taj continues to have a fresh impact. Early this morning, just as the city begins to wake you’ll make the short journey by auto rickshaw to the gates of the Taj Mahal. The Taj was built as a mausoleum for Shah Jahan’s beloved wife, Mumtaz, after she died giving birth to their fourteenth child, and must surely be the world’s greatest monument to love. Architects from as far afield as Europe were commissioned to take part in its creation. At first glance, the Taj appears to be simply white marble, but closer inspection reveals that the surface is inlaid with a profusion of semi-precious stones, which form stylised flowers and bowers. Words fail to do it justice - only a visit can show you its exquisite beauty.
Although Agra is best known for the Taj Mahal, it also boasts a wonderful fort, and this afternoon you will have an opportunity to wander through its pavilions, gardens and passages. Started by Akbar and finally completed four generations later by Aurangzeb, the fort is a fusion of Hindu and Islamic architectural styles, and is early evidence of the distinctive Indian style. In the Afternoon make the drive (taking approximately 5 to 6 hours) back to Delhi. On route, you'll visit the Wildlife SOS Bear Rescue Facility where the rescued bears are afforded a peaceful existence. As tonight is your last evening in India your Group Leader will no doubt organise a traditional ‘last supper’.
Swati Deluxe - 1 night (B)
Trip ends Delhi
The trip ends at your hotel in Delhi. (B)
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