The ride to Bhalon is magnificent. The horses cross the wide Kosi and climb up the ridge on the littoral to move into a thick teak jungle. Much of the riding is gentle walking through spectacular sal and teak forests. There are some stretches of soft loamy soil, which simply invite one to gallop, and we take off, let the horses bite the bit and run. The jungle rushes by as if in a dream. I have leaped into another age into the exaggerated silence of hundreds of square kilometres of jungle, now broken only by the ragged, uneven breathing of the horses, their almost-muffled step beating out an ancient, syncopated rhythm. My breath is even, my heartbeat echoes the hoofbeats. This, I realise, with a slow dawning of pleasure, is a deeply civilised mode of travel. When we slow to a walk, idle thoughts race back into time, into new preoccupations who were the last horsemen to traverse this swathe of land before the rude inventions of macadamised roads and motorcars, some British Sahibs And before that The Rajputs and Mughals And before that&hellip