At night, the three travelers rested when and how they could.
The travelers often rested themselves and their animals for a few days before proceeding.
Travelers rested here along their journey, after the trip through the desert.
This technique is even more evident in the next scene where the three travelers are resting.
Several stations were set up along the road where travelers could rest and refresh their horses.
Travelers rest each of the seven nights in a renovated 16th-century farmhouse.
At its most prosperous time, there were over 45 inns in which travelers could rest, making it a rather large post town.
It had guest houses, or kārvānsarā, where travelers could rest and recover from the day's journey.
He built a hut at the foot of the Rajasimla Pass, where travelers could rest on their way to and from the market.
These post stations (or "post towns") were places where travelers could rest on their journey around the nation.