We were on a
trip to attend a friend's wedding in Dharwad, and were to spend two days at Goa
before reaching there. On our last
night in Goa, while we were just chilling by the small pool at our
villa, our friend started telling us about his father's trip to Dandeli. One thing
lead to another, and a crazy plan was made. The next day, we were on our way to
Dharwad, well, via Dandeli!
Just like any route in the western ghats, the Goa-Dandeli route is extremely beautiful. Entirely covered with forest, it is in a true sense, a nature lover's paradise.
On our way, we called Mr. Milind Kodkeni, who runs a homestay in Dandeli.
Goa-Dandeli |
After having
a nice home-cooked traditional lunch, Milind took us for a small drive and walk
in the jungle for some birdwatching. We were lucky to spot some eagles, blue
kingfishers and many other birds I don't even remember the names of. He then took
us to a spot offering a majestic view of the valley - Nagzari - sort of an echo
point.
Milind is not a person merely offering a homestay to earn money. He has been
born and brought up in Dandeli; his forefathers owned saw mills there which
were later shut down by the government to prevent further deforestations.
All this simply served a teaser and we left Dandeli wishing we had more time.
We reached Dharwad at night with the same thoughts, and finally over dinner
formed yet another crazy plan of going back to Dandeli the next day after the
wedding was over. We were slightly sceptical about the feasibility but still
decided to give it a shot.
We had already called Milind and he had the
whole excursion planned for us. It started with a trip to his friend,
Narasimha's Farmhouse on the border of the forest. It being a typical
countryside home, there was no electricity there when we reached. How thrilling
it was, to just sit in the porch of the house (osari) and watch the
surroundings get darker, while sipping the hot, healthy herbal tea.
Out of the dark |
As darkness set in |
Dandeli offers the facility for white water rafting in Kali river. Since we had
decided to leave early the next day, we told Milind that we would not go for it
(silly us!!). But apparently Milind was resolved on making us experience it.
While we were getting ready the next morning, we got a call from Milind telling
us that there was another group interested in rafting and so he could make
arrangements for an early excursion, if we were ready for it. Needless to say,
we changed our plan again.
The Kali river, not as peaceful as it seems here |
The
trainers gave the instructions, explained the signs and their meanings and we
were off. The Kali river offers the rapids of level between 3 and 4. The cold,
crazy water rapids kept on bumping on to the raft. After going downstream for a
while, our trainer revealed a surprise to us. He decided to take us upstream! It
was as crazy as it could be: the water splashing on our faces, the turbulence
and the thrill! By the time we reached the finish spot, we were drenched in
water!
We got back to the dorm, changed, had a nice
good brunch at Milind's place and then bade goodbye to him and his family with
a heavy heart, only with the resolution of going there again.
Author Bio: A software engineer by profession, Chaitrali and her husband love to travel; be it a leisure trip, a trek, a super-express hectic trip - anything. The only constraint is that it has to be a little "hatke". She recently got into travel blogging after some serious persuasion from her husband. She blogs at http://chaitraliagashe. wordpress.com
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For more ideas on offbeat and responsible destinations in India, visit indiauntravelled.com or join India Untravelled on Facebook, Twitter, and Pinterest. To contribute guest posts / photo essays to this blog, please see our contribution guidelines and send your story ideas to blog@indiauntravelled.com.
Chaitrali you put it very well. while reading it I can portray every minute details.
ReplyDeleteAwesome photography and nice blog!! <3
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Milinds no?
ReplyDelete