Saturday, March 28, 2009

Visit to Dandeli Tiger Reserve


A village adjoining the jungle; This one would be evacuated to make way for the Tiger Reserve


The night gets darker. Warning calls of Chital congregates emanate from a water-body from a deep corner of the forest. You hear chitter of the Slender Loris against the shrill of the night. And as seconds turn to minutes, the Chital cries get even more frequent – till it is lost again in the silence of the forest. You hear of movements around the bush. The birds twitter. The dark, lonely, shrill of the forest gives way to a flurry of activities and you suddenly realize that you aren’t alone there anymore.


Rays of the early morning sun intruding in

Somewhere in February, we decided to call a trip to Dandeli Tiger Reserve. The camp was organized 15 Kms deep inside the tiger reserve in tents of the Kulgi Nature Camp. It was a part of TCS-CSR activity and we were there along with Dr Anish Andheria of Sanctuary Asia/kidsfortiger (KFT - http://www.kidsfortigers.org/).


When we got there, the place was already abuzz with activity. There were 15 bright kids, handpicked from schools all over Mumbai and Pune along with their teachers. They kids were to be known as the tiger ambassadors of KFT and part of their responsibility would be to spread the message of forest and wildlife conservation to their schools.

It was easy to recognize the good intent of KFT to make the children aware of the problems facing mankind and making them active partners in the quest to save our tomorrow. Kudos KFT!!

The Kulgi Nature Camp is located at the periphery of the Dandeli Tiger Reserve and is any nature lover’s delight. The place is known to be a habitat of various animals like tigers, panthers, gaur, wild dogs, spotted deer, the barking deer, sambhar and many exotic birds. It is known to feed about 250 species of birds apart from various reptiles and insects. Some of the birds are said to be endemic to the place. But I was in particular excited to learn about the Black Panther.

Our tents at the Kulgi Nature Camp


Though we weren’t lucky enough to spot the big cats, we spotted a gaur (grazing with its calf), a pack of spotted deer (Chital)-closely followed by wild dogs, a jackal who strayed onto our tent area and many birds. The most memorable one has got to be the Malabar Pied Hornbill. Though I am not very good with animal names, I could manage to remember exotic names like the paradise flycatcher, emerald dove, magpie robin and the paddy crow :-)

The Malabar Giant squirrel

A gaur with its calf (camouflaged against the surronding)

You grasp the enormity of forest only once you get closer to it. There is no such great feeling as you move away from the clutches of the concrete jungle back home, sit back and relax. And amidst the cries of the Chitals and the growl of the Macaques, you feel great as you almost hear the jungle speaking amongst itself. In the words of Anish, “When you walk miles into the forest, caring for the species you love, trying to protect them, you don’t necessarily get to see any traces of them. You start losing hope about their survival. And as you come back to your tent, contemplating on the day that went by, you hear these cries. This is what keeps you going; a feeling that there is still life buzzing amidst all the chaos”.

The sun-set point

Watching the sun set in the vast expanse of dark green mountains was a memorable incident in the whole journey. The vast footage of the pristine, ever green forest amidst a setting sun would stand amongst one of the best incidents of my life. Perhaps what stood out was that there was no hint of human intervention in the entire stretch of ever-green forest. No glittering lights or towering mobile stations to distend the view. We can only hope that Dandeli be left untouched by the selfish human interventions for generations to come.



The vast mosaic of mountains against the blue misty sky


The sun sets

Another high point of the journey was a visit to a large monolithic called Syntheri Rocks. The place is located along the banks of the river Kalindi. We were told that the animals flock to the water body next to it at times. But all we could see were umpteen bee-hives. The rocks being excessively slippery, the waters are extremely dangerous for swimming.
The message is loud and clear :-)


Kalindi River cuts through the rocks

Though any one would stand disappointed after going all the way to a tiger reserve and not spotting one, I came back with a feeling of content. We couldn’t disturb the peace of these amazing creatures facing extinction from the face of this earth. Though spotting one would’ve been icing on the cake, I would rather hear the sounds of existence of these indomitable animals against domineering jungle than spot one.

Bird_Watching. Not me :-)


Niranjan with his collection of figs of various shades

The lone ranger walks on



About KFT:
Program Vision:

A world in which wild tigers and their forest homes are safe well into the next century.
Program Mission:

To inform, educate and motivate 1.5 million young students from 1,000 schools within three years to become an active force to save wild tigers and their homes.
Program Values:

To promote caring family values centered around environmentally-friendly attitudes.
Program Objectives:
To build a strong relationship with schools and teachers.
To be a resource and support for environmental educators.
Use teachers' skills to convince the children under their care that by saving the tiger we save the rich and diverse natural wealth of India.
Create a core of young 'Tiger Cubs' to be the tiger's defence team for the rest of their lives.
Slogan for the year 2008-09:
Bagh Bachao, Jungle Bachao, Bharat Bachao!





Saturday, March 21, 2009

Indian Railways - Auto cancellation of e-ticket.


A few weeks back, we had booked tickets for 105 Madgaon CSTM Express using Indian Railways official website (www.irctc.co.in). The tickets were in waiting list at the time of chart preparation but with e-ticket in tow, we decided to get along with the journey anyway.

However it was a bit confusing when the chart was prepared and we couldnt find our names anywhere in it. We knew that we were as good as any wait-listed passenger and after cursing the railways for mismanagement, decided to get on with the journey.

We tried to take the matter up with the TTE, who was obviously busy with hordes of other passengers ready to lunge onto his guts. It was an extended weekend and the train was jam-packed with polka dotted, guitar wielding Goa bound revellers. We were bound for Ratnagiri and decided to occupy some corner of the train for the 5 hour journey.


Now for all those who are not aware:

The railways have this system of automatic cancellation e-tickets booked through their website (www.irctc.co.in). When e-tickets are in wait-listed status at the time of chart preparation, they are auto-cancelled and the amount is refunded back to the account after deducting the appropriate cancellation charges.

We just have to mail them the ticket details to initiate refund process. For details, refer http://www.irctc.co.in/Waitlisted_E-Ticket.html

On hindsight, its easy to guess that such rules are necessary but its an irony that most of the users are often caught unawares. This is a case of grave mis-communication on the part of railways. I hope they intimate about this rule as a warning at the time of ticket booking itself than confuse the passengers at the time of boarding.

All said and done, I am mighty impressed with the functioning of railways online portal. They not only got back with a personalized mail, but also gave me a quick refund. The amount got credited to my account, all within 5 days of the journey. Keep it up railways!

Hope this helps.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Weekend getaway of the week - Ganapatipule



Konkan Maharashtra:
Somewhere in February, we decided to call in a trip to Alibaug. I fell in love with the place almost instantaneusly. We stayed at a nearby beach called Nagaon.
The hospitality was overwhelming, people were friendly, food was mind blowing. And ofcourse the budget was low too :-).
I almost made up my mind that the next trip ought to be something as chintzy and random. And definitely, Konkan Maharashtra.

Sun-set at Ganapatipule
The plan:
After a few harrowing weekdays, the five of us - Me, Vipul, Naru, Phyco (Niranjan) and Ganesh decided to go somewhere during the Mar 13th-15th (2009) weekend. The plan was etched out for Tarkarli. Since the place being too far away from mainland Mumbai, and as few of us had problems mustering a leave, we decided to act a little less ambitious and go to Ganapatipule instead. Phyco backed out in the end but the 4 of us decided to go ahead with the trip anyway.

Getting there:
After researching on the mode of transport, we decided to rely on the cheapest and the most efficient of them all - Indian railways. The tickets (to and fro) journey were booked online (www.irctc.co.in), both for the CSTM MADGAON SUPER FAST (holiday special) dated 13th night (10.15 PM). The return tickets were booked for 15th night from Ratnagiri and luckily we got a reservation too (10.15 PM again, not Tatkal). The timings ensured that we spend very little of our precious weekend time in Mumbai :-).

We decided to leave office early on friday. After reaching VT, since there was ample time, we decided to head for Colaba. Hung out a little in Mondegars and then went ahead to hog on delicious Bade Miyahś chicken Bhuna and kebabs. The journey had started with a bang already ;-).

The train was on time, the journey was fun (more about the journey in, hopefully, the next post). We reached Ratnagiri at about 4 AM, enquired at the station tea vendor and got to know that the ST bus stop is about 8 kms away and that the first bus leaves for Ganapatipule from there by 5. ( Rickshaws charge about 400 bucks to G'pule but since reducing the cost was priority #1, we decided against it).

About 10 mins walk from the station is the mumbai-ratnagiri highway. A guy on the way told us that we can get 8 seater vehicles, trucks or buses that would drop us till the bus stand. The rickshaws charge about 80 Rs to the bus stand. But with about an hour to spend, we thought to head for the highway instead.

Got a sumo on the highway which charged Rs 10 per person and we were at the bus-stop in 15 mins. We could fetch a spanky ST bus which leaves Ratnagiri at 5.15 AM and charges Rs 35. Slept like a log on the way and reached Ganapatipule at about 6.30 AM.


ST from Ratnagiri

Stay:
The first thing to do was to look for a place to dump our luggage. I had enquired about vacancy at the MTDC resort 2 days before leaving Mumbai and had got to know that the place was sold out. But I thought iĺl check again. MTDC resort is the best as their konkan cottages charge about 1200 Rs and is located straight at the beach. You can listen to the waves all the day. We were not fortunate enough though.

MTDC resort


With the breathtaking MTDC resort out of question, we decided to take the chintziest accomodation and spend most of our time lurking around the beach nistead. So we took the lane next to the MTDC and started walking straight for about 2 mins till we came accross a huge board announcing Kapil Lodge. The place was OK, clean, bed was too hard, amenities were zilch but was not as shady as I expected it to be. The cost was rockbottom too. For a triple bed room, the rent was 400 Rs a day - we knew it was a steal and decided not to think much and stay there anyway.

At the lodge

Now that we are here.
What next?
After freshening up, we decided to venture out. Had a brunch of sorts at a stack next to the Ganesh temple (dont remember the name). The place is at the end of the lane adjoining the temple gates. It served delicious Puri Bhaji, Puri Shrikhand, Misal Pav, Kokam juice and what not. We hogged everything like gluttons. The price was dirt cheap too.

The rest of the day was then spent lurking around in the beach. Neither of us were in a mood to drench ourselves in the salty water so we just lazed around, doing nothing.
We asked everyone about places serving sea food and everyone recommended SaiPrabha which is about 15 mins walk from MTDC. Though each one of us had our own views, I liked the food served there. And no matter what, I was in no mood to go back without feasting on Konkan fish curry! Hehe

The Ganesh Temple
Day 2:
Woke up pretty late in the morning and checked out of the Kapeeĺ lodge at 10 AM. We decided to leave Ganapatipule and visit the nearby Jaigarh fort which was about 15 Kms from there. Our plan was to check out Marleshwar waterfalls as well -which was also highly recommended by everyone we asked. But we were misled by the rickshaw wallahs who asked us to go to take the Chapha-Khandala-Jaigad route.

It made sure that we take a convoluted 30 Kms journey instead. Got to Chapha by the ST bus (Rs 8) and then rickshaw from there (Rs 200). Got to know that JSW energies have a plant adjoining the fort. It was early afternoon by the time we got there. The view from the fort was majestic. With hardly a trace of any human being around, I got hold of Naru's slingshot and started targetting stray objects nearby. Hehe.

Target Practice
After watching the village from there, we felt jealous of 1the lucky villagers for having such a peaceful co-existence with the sea. Imagine having a beach at your backyard! The place was also aligned with palm groves and mango trees.

With Marleshwar out of the question, we decided to check out the village. It was a peaceful afternoon. We thought we walk all the way upto JSW port but decided against it. Got back to the bus stand after a walk of about 20 minutes. Also interacted with the kids and people on the way. It was about 3 by the time we were back to the bus-stop. We could fetch the 3 PM bus to Ratnagiri from there. The bus fare was about Rs 40.

The village surrounding the Jaigad Fort

Ratnagiri:
Getting back to Ratnagiri was like getting back to the concrete jungle. We were too early for our train. Had mediocre food at a stack next to the bus-stop. Checked with the stall owner who recommended to check out the Kohinoor point. Rickshaw fare to the point was about 50.

But this part of the journey was merely waste of time. Kohinoor resort owns a stetch of land atop the mountain surrounding the Bhatye beach and charges 50 Rs just to get in and watch the sun-set from there. We didnt think it was worth it so we walked back all the way to Bhatye beach. The sun-set there was extremely photogenic and gave Vipul and Ganesh the opporunity to click the best pictures of the trip. But do not expect to get into the water or have a dip or two. You might find the water is too murky for your liking.

We hung out there till late evening and after having our dinner, got back to the station and waited for the train back home. We were all dead tired by then. The train was surprisingly on time and we finally hurled ourselves into it, occupied the berths allotted to us and slept till Thane arrived.
The three musketeers (L-R) Naru, Vipul, Gayness


And then the sun sets at G'pule


It was a indeed nice way to spend the weekend. We got back with peace of mind and a steely resolve to go out and check Tarkarli-Malvan soon!