Travelpreferredway.com is the India Travel Planner provides the Concept of this programme is to allow you to create your own personal itinerary using a combination of the elements in this Website.This means you can fly from anywhere in the world and commence your tour on date you specify.You are free to make your own flight arrangements to India and take advantage of one of our Gates to India packages.
For more details please visit
http://www.travelpreferredway.com/
Travel Horizon India is one of India's premier destination management company. We are a professional Travel Planner & Tour Company based in Delhi with our associate offices all over India. Highly qualified professionals, sincere to their working and having the Travel Trade experience of more than 10 Years, manage the company.
It all started, with the desire to create, a travel service with uniqueness. A travel agency that would provide Personalized Service to its clients. An agency with a difference which would do more than just take clients from Point-A to Point-B. An agency that could provide luxury, but still being competitively priced. Our range of services include:
Inbound Tours
Incentive Tours
International & Domestic ticketing
International & Domestic Hotel bookings
Conferences & Sales meetings.
Corporate & Leisure Travel
Car Rentals
All travel related allied services
Welcome to our World.
We believe service begins with simple relationships: agent and traveller, agency and client. We welcome you to discover our world.
Travel Horizon India dedicates itself to a single-minded policy- Create the most effective and distinct Travel Solutions for its clients whether its a corporate client or it is a tourist group visiting India. Our team of experienced personnel provides prompt & excellent services to both corporate and leisure clients.
India has been changing and re-shaping itself for as long as anywhere on earth, forever producing new forms of culture and absorbing new influences. Visiting the subcontinent, you’ll see spectacular carved temples and gleaming marble palaces, lonely Himalayan lamaseries and far-flung dusty villages where council meetings are held under the shade of a banyan tree, plodding camels, holy cows, snake charmers and wild-haired sadhus: you’ll also find a dynamic state racing into the twenty-first century. The boundaries of modern India, fixed some fifty years ago, are merely the latest in a four-thousand-year sequence of redefinitions that have produced one of the most heterogeneous societies in the world. The land where the Buddha lived and preached, and where the Moghul Muslims erected the Taj Mahal, has recreated itself as both a majority Hindu nation and the world’s largest secular democracy, home to almost one thousand million people.
Many first-time visitors cannot see past the grinding poverty of the country’s most disadvantaged citizens. Others expect a timeless ascetic wonderland and are indignant to find that materialism has its place here too. Still more find themselves intimidated by what may seem, initially, an incomprehensible and bewildering continent.
This guide is intended to lead you through the states, cities and towns of India, offering historical, architectural and cultural information to enrich your trip, whether you intend to travel for a few weeks or several months. The guide’s intention is to spare you the mistakes and anti-climaxes that can spoil the best-laid plans, and to direct you towards off-beat delights as well as world-famous landmarks. It covers specific states and regions by introducing the major sights, surveying the history, and summarizing the major travel routes. In each town we’ve detailed the best places to stay and eat, reviewing palace hotels of faded grandeur alongside inexpensive lodges and simple pilgrim guesthouses, and Mughlai restaurants next to village food stalls. We haven’t set out to list the cheapest options everywhere, because in India, as anywhere else, the cheapest can easily be the worst. As well as providing detailed accounts of all the major sights, we provide the information you need to search out performing arts, enjoy Indian cinema, explore ashrams and religious centers, and get swept away by the fervors of the great festivals.
The best Indian itineraries are the simplest. To imagine that there is some set list of places you must go, or things you must see, is a sure way to make your trip self-defeating. You couldn’t see everything in one expedition, even if you spent a year trying. Far better then, to concentrate on one or two specific regions, and above all, to be flexible. Although it requires a deliberate change of pace to venture away from the cities, rural India has its own very distinct pleasures. In fact, while Indian cities are undoubtedly adrenalin-fuelled, upbeat places, it is possible – and certainly less stressful – to travel for months around the subcontinent and rarely have to set foot in one.
The information under Basics provides an overview of the practical aspects of travelling in India. To put it simply, it’s not as difficult as you may imagine, or may be told. Some travellers impose an exhausting sequence of long-distance journeys and other privations upon themselves that no Indian would dream of attempting, and then wonder why they’re not enjoying their trip. Although becoming overtired is an almost inevitable part of travelling around India, getting ill – despite the interminable tales of Delhi-belly and associated hardships so proudly told by a certain type of India bore – certainly isn’t. If you give yourself time to rest there’s no reason why you should pick up anything worse than a headache. Food is generally extremely good, especially in south India, famed for its creative vegetarian cuisine; water can be bought in bottles, just like anywhere else in the world, and there are plenty of comfortable, inexpensive places to stay. Though the sheer size of the country means that travel is seldom straightforward, the extensive road, rail and air links ensure that few destinations are inaccessible, and fares are invariably cheap. Furthermore, the widespread use of English makes communication easy for the majority of Western visitors. Journeys may be long – a four-hour bus ride is normal, and travelling constantly for thirty hours not uncommon – but they can provide some of the very best moments of a trip: punctuated with frequent food stops and memorable encounters, and passing through an everchanging landscape. For long hauls, much the best way to go is by train; with computerized booking now established almost everywhere, the Indian rail network is as efficient as almost any in the world. Rail journeys also offer the chance to meet other travellers and Indians from all walks of life, and a constant stream of activity as chai-wallahs, peanut-sellers, musicians, astrologers and mendicants wander through the carriages.
The account has been set up in a bid to reach those who love to travel and want to share their experiences with like - minded people. Anything that people want on the page will be there from photos, comments, travel tips and anything else that people can think of.
it is thought that this is the best to reach people nowadays as everyone seems to have an account with at least one social networking site. Students, people in full time work and those who are at home all day are thought to log on to these sites for hours on end. Many companies have started to realise the benefits of these sites as it's an easy way of reaching mass audiences in one place.
The reason behind the profile being set up is so that people can interact with other keen travellers and make friends with people all over the world. Once the page is more established and Uniglobe have more 'friends' it is hoped that people will use the page to share photos from all over the world and share stories that people are going to be interested in hearing about.
Facebook was originally intended for use by students at Harvard university as a way of getting to know other students on the campus. Gradually more and more universities were allowed to access the sites, then businesses and now anyone can join it. Something that was intended as a small university portal has now turned into one of the most popular websites in the world with 34 million registered users.
Facebook profiles have the potential to reach millions of users with an estimated 200,000 new people signing up to it every day. An incredible 60 billion pages are viewed by users every month who are interested to know what their friends, co - workers and people they haven't seen in years are up to.
There are many different reasons why Facebook has become so popular from the hundreds of applications you can download to the people you can contact who you never thought you would ever find again. The site has become such a phenomenon that it is now the sixth most trafficked site in the United States.
Both Alexa Kumar & Derek Both are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Alexa Kumar has sinced written about articles on various topics from . Alexa. Alexa Kumar's top article generates over 2900 views. to your Favourites.
Derek Both has sinced written about articles on various topics from Home Accessories, Customer Service and Family Travel. provide flights and holidays to destinations all over the world. Derek Both's top article generates over 1500000 views. to your Favourites.
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