Saturday, November 6, 2010

Trek to Peb Gad(Vikatgad)





Trek to Peb Gad (Vikatgad) forced me introspect why all the enthusiasm and the hyper activity in me just before the start of trek dies as I begin to climb the path to the summit. I keep pondering all the way when will this hardship end and when will I lie again on the soft bed of my house. Damn! You should watch my face at the end of trek. I vow to never trek again and the next day, I am ready with the plan for next trek.

This trek too was arranged hurriedly which I hate the most and it got finalised on the previous night itself. So much less time and I started to take the necessary things with me. This is one of the few treks that didn’t force me to wake at 5 in the morning. I aroused from my bed around 6:30 a.m. to catch 7:51 train to Karjat from Kalyan.
You can reach Peb Gad by alighting at Neral station on KYN-PUNE route. Catch any local to Karjat or Khopoli. We had a small breakfast at a local eatery which served a good dish Misal-Pav which had a slight taste of Chicken Masala in it. The Chicken Masala taste has a distinct signature of local ‘Agri’ community which lingered throughout the trek in my mouth. 

There are two ways by which you can reach Peb Gad. First one is the one I am describing below:
Walk form Neral station to the base village Fanaswadi which takes roughly 45 minutes. Keep asking locals for directions to reach the base village. From our initial survey on net, we had found the path to trek a bit tricky and decided to hire a guide. We bought down the price of our guide from INR 400 to INR 100 and decided to take the young boy with us. He was wearing only slippers for trek! The trek started with a beautiful waterfall awaiting us after base village. We decided to give it a slip as we had come for trekking and not to soak ourselves in waterfall. The initial path was of medium difficulty with steep climb till you reach the plateau. The initial climb blew away all the energy I had in me and we still had a decent half way to go. The heart beats were being heard in my ear and we took a small pit stop on the way. I sat on a rock while my friends wondered to take snapshots of the beautiful plateau and the green carpet surroundings.  
After a small rest, we all started proceeding towards the final challenge. The second part of this trek passes through dense forests which can mislead you. The guide showed us the correct path and we started to climb a small waterfall. The climb is bit steep here and sudden change weather had me and Shardul giving out heat waves from our body. You could literally see the water vapour waves coming from our body. The humidity factor was striking us hard but in the end we reached a point where we could finally see Peb Gad and the ridge joining Peb Gad and Matheran. Then came the rocky patch about which I had read on several bloggers site. The rope was hanging dangerously from the rocky cliff and we had to put the whole weight on the rope and push forward our body to clear the patch. Good Samaritans had made the job easy as they had preinstalled the rope firmly to the rocks. A small walk leads us to the caves which are well maintained and has a small bust of Shivaji Maharaj.

We had a small lunch and proceeded towards the ‘Buruj’(wall or protection of the fortress)which overlooks Matheran. En route, you will have to climb steel ladder which vibrates due to heavy gush of wind. One step wrong while climbing the ladder and will fall down in the valley. So be extremely careful here. Keep walking straight to the Buruj. The view from that point was simply amazing and breath taking. You could clearly see the ridge joining Peb and Matheran. The deep valley, the dense forests and cool air took away my tiredness instantly. We were also able to see the path from Peb Gad towards Matheran. The toy train line is also clearly visible from here. After initial heated discussions, we decided to take this path towards Matheran as our return path. We bid adieu to our guide and started going towards Matheran. This path was completely new to us and another group guided us till the end. The return path is very simple and straight forward with no twists. You literally cross over from Peb to Matheran over the small thin ridge. Here we encountered extremely heavy rain and our path turned into muddy water stream. After sometime the path became more or less manmade with concrete steps laid till you reach the toy train tracks. A bench awaits you installed by railway authorities and a sign board signalling the Peb Gad is visible from here. Walk down with the tracks to reach theNeral-Matheran road. Many small waterfalls awaits you on the track route. If u take opposite path, that is, if u start to climb upwards with the road, you will reach Dasturi naka. We easily got a lift from a Taxi who dropped us till Neral station. You can take this opposite path if you want to avoid rope climbing. This is the second path viable for newcomers and is very easy.

In the end, the trek was completely a new experience for me. The beautiful surroundings of Peb are simply breath taking you ought to visit this fort once if you are an avid trekker.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

Circus





First a fall, I would like to specify that circus here doesn’t mean an album from Britney Spears. Next it is a salute to all artists and all species of Kingdom Animalia for entertaining me for following 10 reasons:

  1. Joker and again not the ‘The dark night’ joker. An eternal part of circus. Life of the circus. Made me laugh till I fell from my seat. Most vivid memory-One joker strikes the arse of another joker with a bat so that a small fountain of water comes out of his zip which I thought as a small kid as if he was urinating in public in front of all.

  2. Elephants- for playing cricket and Doctor-Patient. Elephant injections really frightened me.

  3. Aerobatics- For all those men and women who performed remarkable feats high above the ground. Fantastic synchronization!(Synchronisation sounded fantastic till Microprocessors came to haunt me)

  4. Tigers and lions- They were seen in action till I was in 5th Std. Ring master showed dare-devilry in taming them. Sight of tigers and lions were attraction at the end of all shows. Maneka Gandhi bought halt to this show. They remained as a burden to circus as they couldn’t be released in wild.(never saw a Liger at circus though the lions and tigers were kept in same cage)

  5. Stunts performed by bikers in the round sphere(Centrifugal force reminded my teacher in school-again enjoyment crashed like a computer hard disk)  

  6. Colourful parrots. They were imported( Off course illegally)

  7. Dogs for performing doggy tricks.

  8. Artists for riding one tyre bicycle.

  9. Various artists for doing tricks that I hardly remember

  10.The circus managers and all backstage performers for doing a perfect job and delivering high      quality entertainment at INR 70 only

‘Rambo’, ‘Jumbo’, ‘National Circus’ are the few names that I remember even now. The real question here is the entertainment that we got from animals was cruelty or not? Did I enjoy this at the cost of the poor animals? Once I saw a Hippopotamus at a Circus. Hippo’s are not even found in India. How did the Hippo live in a small tank of a truck? Some questions remain really unanswered…

Monday, July 19, 2010

Young Forever..



Let’s dance in style, let’s dance for a while
Heaven can wait, we are only watching skies
Hoping for the best, but expecting worst
Are you gonna drop the bomb or not?

Let us die young or live forever
We don’t have the power but we never say never
Sitting in a sand pit, life’s a short trip
The music for a sad man

Forever young, I wanna be forever young
Do you really want to live forever , forever and ever?
Forever young, I wanna be forever young
Do you really want to live forever , forever and ever?

Who doesn’t want to live forever young? Watching this video on VH1 sung by Jay-z feat Mr.Hudson made me think to live forever young. The young blood flowing through your veins in the age of 20 is more gushing and takes along with itself all the joys and sorrows with it. The blood gets roughed up easily with the thick walls of our veins and flows vibrantly. The blood flowing at the age of 40 has thick dirt on its wall and roughing up against the thick walls causes more pain than in the age of 20.

The craziness, the energy, the enthusiasm, the will to try new things is experienced by all of us only at young age. Once this golden period is gone with the wind, the routing bore schedule of adulthood starts which takes away the desire to try new things. Being young gives you freedom to try new things which your elders have never tried.

Failure at a very young age can pinch you more than the teacher who used to take it in school. You will 
stumble along an untraded path many a time but that is a learning curve for you. Failures make you wonder about all the hardships you have taken and still you are a ground zero. Digesting a failure and coming across a new idea is more palatable at young age. But after we go in adulthood, is it possible?

Responsibilities grow as the age progresses. We don’t have time to think about ourselves. We are cared what the world is doing and try to follow the world.

Running down the street of your neighbourhood at a very young age with joy overflowing over a small reason to make you happy arouses curiosity among neighbours. Try this now. Neighbours will be ready to dial 102 to take you to mental asylum.

Life changes so quickly in a matter of years.

Live it!  
   

     

Friday, July 9, 2010

Trek to Tunga fort





They call it ‘tunga ’, ‘tung’, ‘tungi’ killa causing confusion between us and the locals between us and the locals but i have to say that I had an awesome experience while trekking the Tunga fort.

Traveling by ‘Indaryani’ express train and tasting the immortal Karjat’s ‘Vada-pav’ is a must do on a trekkers list while going from Mumbai to Lonavala. They taste really good in the rainy season. Get down at Lonavala and catch the state transport bus to Bhambarde. The bus takes you through cloud kissed roads with a deep valley on one side. The mist makes you feel as if you are on a plane to Heaven. On the way you will INS ‘Shivaji’ and a Tata dam. Get down at a tiny chowk named as Ghusalkhamb and take a left turn to start the trek.

Walk the 7 kilometers paved village road to Tungvadi. Always, keep trying to get a lift from vehicles going on the way. Though the vehicles are few you must always try your luck. On the way you will see sylvan surroundings and you can easily pass the time by admiring the nature around you. Just before the start of Tungvadi you will see Tunga Killa. A tapering mountain facing south, you will have to take a left turn from the road. Landmark for turning left is Maruti’s(Hanuman’s) mandir. The trekking path starts from here.
The way to the top is of medium difficulty and first time trekkers should avoid this trek. First time goers have ample option like the neighbouring Lohagad fort. The path is steep at some places and you reach the first door of the fort. The fort has a peculiar characteristic that it has lots of banana trees on it. A second Ganapati temple awaits you after you cross the second door of the fort. You will still have to climb a little further to reach the pinnacle of the fort. Time taken to reach pinnacle is roughly one hour and forty five minutes. The view from the fort is breath-taking. On one side you have the Pawana dam while on the other side you can see Sahyadri range facing the Konkan. The hide and seek of the mist continues all the day. At one point you can see only one side with the twin forts of Lohagad and Visapur starring at you. Tikona fort is also clearly visible down to the south. We got a rare chance when the mist in both the sides cleared and we took many pictures from our digital cameras. The view can never be forgotten!

We started to descend after having a small lunch that we had carried. Don’t expect stalls around this fort selling snacks. This fort is devoid of picnickers and is quiet place unlike Lohagad. The descend took one hour and the tedious walk began towards Ghusalkamb. After being denied a ride by a truck driver from the base of the fort and after covering three-fourth way, we got a ride at a back of a lorry truck. Climbing at the back of lorry was a gruel some task but I managed it with a few bruises on my thigh. The lorry driver drove it like an F1 car and we got a perfect view of the mountains. The cold air, bucking to avoid get hit by branches of trees was really thrilling experience that you would expect at the end of trek. We got down at Lonavala after paying the driver 50INR for a ride of three. Paisa-vasool!

One of the few treks that I will cherish throughout my life.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

My dear Mosquitoes






My dear Mosquitoes,
        
                                  They mark up their presence by buzzing around your ear at every part of the world. Their female counterparts are omnipotent. I wish they had the good genes of their male conterparts. The genetic mutation in the female mosqui ( Ya i call them mosqui) has caused a great harm to human mankind, not even sparing Alexander to poor engineering students like me. They are biting me as I sit on the table typing this post.

                                  Ronald Ross, who discovered that Malaria is spread by mosquis( you should thank me for increasing your general knowledge) is the only great achievement that mankind has done in the last century. All the drugs and insecticides have done a great harm to environment than to mosquis. It's like mosquis wait for a new drug to be tested on them and declare themselves as drug resistant ( they might be holding olympics like events to find the toughest one to survive against the  most potent drugs that scientists create :P)

                                  Falciparum , Vivax are familiar to all tropical people. It strikes us slowly not even sparing the golden spoon fed one. The mosqius are now making their presence fell even during day. Some speices feed exclusively during day, naming them would make this post capable of publishing it in 'Nature'. The buzzing really irritates you if you are sleeping after a long tiring work. The buzzing acts like a natural alarm, you will not need digital ones if yuo sleep without mosqui nets. By buzzing around your ear, they whisper you the future, your break-ups and calamities in your life.

                                  Ever had the feeling of killing mosquis with your hand and getting it soaked it in your own blood or even others. Yuck!! is your first reaction and you go to basin to wash it. Sparing a mosqui is like inviting death! He may seek revenge by infecting you plasmodiun blood.Whenever you partially kill a mosqui, he flies like a mad man hitting the blades of the fan and ultimately dying a cruel death.

                                   Playing any outdoor games like football, cricket will tend to form mosqui towers hovering like vultures above your head. Wish we had competitions for the highest mosqui towers in our childhood. Childhood reminds me of a dear friend of mine applying castor oil to his cranium to avoid mosqui towers. The problem solved na! Only he can answer whether it was effective way to ward them off.
 
                                    The male counterparts are the blessed ones. The feed on plant juice. Yummy juice, they should be teasing the females. I think the mosqui community might have a blood balnk of their own. It might be useful for the weaker females and the male counterparts would buy pure blood as a valentine gift to impress the females. The blood may be tagged acording to the haemoglobin content and one ml blood might cost 10 ml of fresh juice( All hypotical assumptions)

                                      Wish we have Versailles like agreement with mosquis but Versailles ultimately led to world war 2. Peace prevaling between us is impossible as I just killed a mosqui and so are you killing them. The toll count of mosquis killed by me is 76,54,757.One thing is sure, they will get extinct when we get extinct.

                                                                                                                      Regards,
                                                                                                                      The mosqui killer.
                          

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

The world without religions

The world without religions........
It would have been more peaceful than the present condition. Just for a second close your eyes and let your mind ponder for a minute about all the aspects that the world would have reaped without religions.
No wars in the name of religion, no communal riots over petty issues, no discrimination, no human genocides in name of religion and lots more....

But why do we have a religion? Many people relate it to spirituality. If you are religious then you are spiritual. I laugh at such things and don't argue with that person. As far as I know, ancient people worshiped nature and that's well fine with me. But slowly it shifted towards non-existent mythological characters which were just heard but not seen. People started believing in legends as we find some kind of calm and peace in mind when we hear the victory of good over evil and we start believing in  them blindingly about the so called super powers the person possesses and we start considering him God. This belief forms the base of every religion. It's fine till here. It's obvious that we start believing in someone in time of despair. Now here part-2.

The world has many religions. Here starts exploitation in the name of religion. People start telling and preaching each other how my religion is greater than others and do the job of pouring oil in the fire. This ignites the mind of the person who is hearing this and he too spreads the word to others.  These preachers become silent spectators when the fire takes a violent face. Why do they do this? Simple reason- personal gain and greed. They feel delighted when someone's else blood is spilling at their own expense. They see their aim getting full filled and these leads to mistrust among different people in the world. We are held at ransom due to greediness of few people in this world.

In my opinion the world would have been a better place without such elements but they come with religion. Just like buy 2 soap bars and get one free!  Just for a moment what all wrong deeds we have done in the name of religion from since religion came into existence. Atheist groups advocate all these facts and advocate many campaigns like why to fear over your deeds with religion.

Though issues go well past the discussions about the need of religion in the present world. I have seen in today's world that the belief in one's own religion is getting stronger day by day compounding more problems than ever instead of solving them. One day will come when we will realize our mistakes that we have done in the name of religion but by that time it will be too late.....

(This post just expresses only one point of view) 

Perceptions about Marathwada





PARBHANI- The place where I was born. Recently had a short visit to my birthplace after a long gap of 10 years. I have been visiting Marathwada for the past 20 years and here are some general observation about the life and people living out there.

For all those non-Maharashtraians, Marathwada occupies the center space in the map of  Maharashtra comprising of Aurangabad, Jalna, Beed, Parbhani, Hingoli, Nanded, Osmanabad and Latur districts.
My general perceptions about Marathwada are :

1.Very less or no industrial development in the area except Aurangabad, Latur and Nanded.  Aurangabad, Latur and Nanded have some what development but not that promising.

2.People are employed largely in agricultural sector and towns and cities employ public sector. Very few people employed with private sector.

3.Only one railway line passes through the region limiting the development. The railway line is not electrified and the passenger trains are subjected to delays over crossing due to single track thus wasting time, money and energy. Common man depends on railways and hence they are in poor state. It really frustrates me when the train stops for crossing at a rural station.

4.Life is too slow there. People tend to do work slowly as they have ample of time.

5.Road development is okay.

6.Agriculture development needs to be accelerated. The profit should reach the small farmers. Shortage of rainfall makes matters worse.

7.Water is scare here. Only one dam, Jayakwadi, near Paithan has benefited the area since independence. Rest all dams lay dried up creating huge shortage of drinking water. Canals lay dried up the whole year and water is released only for drinking purposes and not for agricultural purposes. Situation turns volatile in summers.

8. Water conservation should be promoted here at large scale here. Ground water resources are here so depleted that even a 250 ft. deep bore-well gets dried up here.

9.Social development is poor. The poor remain poor here.

10.This region is giving Chief-Ministers to Maharashtra for the past 15 years successively. Still no development?Politicians here gobble up all money and purchase huge tracts of land.

11.Young people have to work outside Marathwada in private sector. Money invested here by people here is earned from outside this area which spurts development in housing sector.

12. No or very little forest cover here. Agricultural sector has grabbed up all land here.

Still may points remain to be discussed. The views expressed are purely mine and if sentiments hurt by this post are deeply regretted.