العناصر | Rishikesh and Haridwar Yoga Retreat, Beatles Ashram, Ganga Aarti
Rishikesh and Haridwar Yoga Retreat, Beatles Ashram, Ganga Aarti
Rishikesh
المعلومات المهمة
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تتوفر خيارات النقل العام في مكان قريب
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مناسبة لجميع مستويات اللياقة البدنية
سياسة الإلغاء
للحصول على استرداد كامل للمبلغ، قم بإلغاء الحجز قبل ٢٤ ساعة على الأقل من موعد المغادرة المقرر.
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لاسترداد المبلغ بالكامل، يجب الإلغاء قبل 24 ساعة على الأقل من موعد بدء التجربة.
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يُعرض وقت انتهاء الحجوزات بالتوقيت المحلي.
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إذا قمت بالإلغاء قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة، فلن تتمكّن من استرداد المبلغ الذي دفعته.
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لإجراء هذه الجولة، يجب توافر حدّ أدنى من المسافرين. إذا تم إلغاؤها بسبب عدم استيفاء الحد الأدنى، فسوف يُعرض عليك إمكانية اختيار تاريخ/تجربة مختلفة أو استرداد المبلغ بالكامل.
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لن يتم قبول أي تغييرات تجريها قبل أقل من 24 ساعة من وقت بدء الجولة.
Explore the spiritual heart of India on a 2-day journey from Delhi to Rishikesh and Haridwar. This private tour immerses travelers in yoga traditions and sacred rituals, starting with a visit to the iconic Beatles Ashram, where meditation took root in the West. Walk the Ram Jhula bridge, attend a tranquil yoga session, and witness the enchanting Ganga Aarti ceremony. The next day, trek or take a ropeway to the Mansa Devi Temple and explore the revered ghats of Har Ki Pauri, known for their spiritual significance. Ideal for seekers and spiritual travelers looking for a deep connection with India's rich cultural heritage.
- Private 2-day tour from Delhi featuring yoga and meditation - Visit t...
ما تشمله الجولة
2 أيام
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
2 أيام
مُقدم في الإنكليزية
إلغاء مجاني
بطاقة رقمية
ما تشمله الجولة
Private transportation
Entrance fee
Breakfast
إقامة ليلة واحدة في فندق في ريشيكيش
Rishikesh and Haridwar Yoga Retreat, Beatles Ashram, Ganga Aarti
Rishikesh
نبذة
Explore the spiritual heart of India on a 2-day journey from Delhi to Rishikesh and Haridwar. This private tour immerses travelers in yoga traditions and sacred rituals, starting with a visit to the iconic Beatles Ashram, where meditation took root in the West. Walk the Ram Jhula bridge, attend a tranquil yoga session, and witness the enchanting Ganga Aarti ceremony. The next day, trek or take a ropeway to the Mansa Devi Temple and explore the revered ghats of Har Ki Pauri, known for their spiritual significance. Ideal for seekers and spiritual travelers looking for a deep connection with India's rich cultural heritage.
- Private 2-day tour from Delhi featuring yoga and meditation - Visit t...
At the atmospheric ruins of the Maharishi Mahesh Yogi Ashram—popularly called the Beatles Ashram—you walk through a forested campus where meditation huts, lecture halls, and graffiti-covered domes quietly recall a remarkable cultural moment. In 1968, The Beatles stayed here studying transcendental meditation with Maharishi Mahesh Yogi, helping introduce Eastern meditation practices to Western audiences. Today the abandoned structures have been reclaimed by nature and art, creating an unusual blend of spirituality, history, and street murals that give visitors a glimpse into the counterculture era that connected Indian philosophy with global pop culture.
١ ساعة
3
Ram Jhula
The slender iron span of Ram Jhula stretches gracefully across the emerald waters of the Ganges, linking bustling temples and ashrams on either side of the river. Walking across this suspension bridge is a quintessential Rishikesh experience: monks in saffron robes, pilgrims carrying offerings, motorbikes weaving carefully through pedestrians, and views of the Himalayan foothills rising beyond the riverbanks. From the middle of the bridge the Ganges appears calm and wide, and the rhythm of temple bells and river breezes makes the crossing feel like a small pilgrimage in itself.
٤٥ دقائق
4
Ganga Barrage - Rishikesh
As twilight settles over the riverbanks of Rishikesh, the evening Ganga Aarti begins—one of the most moving spiritual ceremonies in India. At the ghats of Parmarth Niketan, priests and students chant ancient Sanskrit hymns while large brass lamps filled with fire are offered to the River Ganges. The ritual symbolizes gratitude to the river, which sustains nearly 400 million people in its basin according to hydrological studies of the Ganges system. Visitors often release small leaf boats carrying flowers and candles into the water, watching them drift downstream like tiny constellations.