Monday, July 24, 2006

Dudhsagar again...

The main access to the falls is normally closed during the monsoons, as parts of it go under water, but the fall comes into its own during this time of the year. However the only access to the fall is by rail, so that’s how we decided to go there. The train takes you to a Dudhsgar station, which is just under of a km from the main falls; the rest has to be walked. However there are no convenient trains around. So ideally you have to climb on a goods train, which cannot stop at the falls, as a result of which you have to jump of a slow moving train. Its said that if loaded goods train stops in the ghat section, it cannot restart the ascend, so it has to be brought all the way back to Kulem station, where we planned to start our journey.
So after some negotiations in Kanadda (by sachin) we found an entire railway engine to ourselves. Was quiet an experience, until we suddenly got unceremoniously thrown out, after news of some official conducting inspections.
Disappointed and dejected back in the car, we were about to leave when a local came to us asking, if we needed any help to go to the waterfall, so after some more negotiations, we were off, three of us on two bikes, with their respective owners, tightly balancing our asses on the bikes, traversing the narrow gap, where the gravel of the railway track ends and the ditch which acts as a storm drain.
Its roughly a 12km ride to the Sonaulim railway station, from where we had to walk the 4 km or so to the waterfall, and about a km further to the railway station, traversing 5 tunnels on the way.
If you plan to go there during the monsoons (which is a good time to) make sure u are adequately protected from the rain, put on some good footwear, a lot of streams crossing the path, some nice stuff to eat, (nothing to eat out there) and water.

Sunday, July 23, 2006


the Dudhsagar bridge....

Dudhsagar waterfalls...

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Me at Dudhsagar water falls.....

The point where we had driven to previously...

The Dudhsagar falls from half way there... notice the railway bridge across it, where we were headed...

one of the 5 tunnels we crossed...

the walk to Dudhsagar...

Railway driver...

Parags flower fantasy...

Kulem railway yard...

Sunday, July 16, 2006


Wild fungii...

Monsoon scape...

Off roading...

Water rise....

Window to the world..

Cabo De Rama..

Cabo De Rama...

A fish's tale...

Off road...

Rolling countryside...

The babe...

Lush monsoon scenery...

Mushrooms in bloom...

Praggys.. closeups..

Cannon at Cabo de Rama

Monsoon magic...

Thursday, July 13, 2006


A place near Azra ( near Nipani)

Sujays wedding (blore)

bridging the divide...deviding the bridge....

Monday, July 03, 2006

Mahabaleshwar

Can you get too much of a good thing? well, i guess you can, in varying degrees, that was the inspiration behind this trip we went off on. For a change,we decided to hit places outside of our beautiful Goa. It was a trip long delayed, for I was waiting to the monsoons to begin, As i firmly believe its the best time to see interior Maharastra. So off we went to Shirdi, Pune and Mahabaleshwar. And what a blast we had.
Left Goa, early on the 30th to reach Shirdi (Sai baba Mandir)late at night. ( around 11:30) thanks to, a horrible recomendation for the Pune-Nagar-Shirdi road, by a rice merchant from Pune (never believe one, not even while buying rice) and having gotten terribly lost on the way out of Pune. (Man did the traffic suck). Any way, once there and comfortably settled into a hotel, the debate that came into the picture was " to attend, or not to attend - the morning Aarthi, the problem was that you have to be in the mandir hall by 4:30am to be able to attend it. Not some thing that comes too easy to any of us. But the debate was settled and the alarm set to 3:30am. We actually hit the temple only at 6:30am, but it was well worth the long journey, a definate-"must goto" at least once, if you have not been there yet, the place has an amazing record to convert non-believers.
The next day, it was back to Pune and its horrible trafic, but this time we took the Pune-Nasik road, and it was well worth it, it was terribly senic. After spending some time in Pune shopping, we left for Mahabaleshwar, to check out the place before returning to Goa.
Mahabaleshwar, in one word was - Foggy, and in three words, Wet and Foggy, It rained literally non stop, was terribly foggy, and the market was terribly conjested with cars, but that apart, the place was terribly beautiful, one recomendation however is to preferably check out the hotel rooms before taking one, this time of the year they are all leaking terribly.
Next day we checked out
1. Mahabali temple - believed to be over 4000 years old
2. Kates Point -4231m - spectacular view of the whai, plains below, and of a Dam
3. Archie's Straberry farm - Great Straberry milk shakes, and straberries with cream.
This is a place you have to see at least twice, once in the peak season, for its great weather, lovely views, and delicious straberries, and next in the monsoons, for its "wet-foggy-cold-romantic mood" kind of weather.

Carrots....

A Straberry flower...

A raw straberry..

United colours of Mahabaleshwar...

Flowers in motion...

Getting there....

Whai valley...

Whai town as seen from Harisons Folly..

The krishna river carving out the Krishna valley...

Kates point as seen from Needle hole point... ( also known as the elephant head)

Needle hole point as seen from Kates point...

Echo point.. as seen from kates point..

Balakvadi Dam, from kates point...

Panchganga temple at Mahabaleshwar, Where 5 rivers originate..Krishan, Sharavati, Koyna, Veena and Gayathri..

Road to Old Mahabaleshwar...

Bhilar Water falls Mahabaleshwar....

The road to Mahabaleshwar....

Water fall on the Nasik-Pune Road...

Rockey montain, Satara?

Poona - Bangalore Highway...