1st and 2nd September 2010
Sawantwadi and Amboli
The title of this post is a quote by Norwegian Explorer Roald Amundsen which I feel best describes our time in Amboli, a small hill station in Sindhudurgh District of Maharashtra. We had long planed out Zoology Short Excursion to this place and had booked tickets to Sawantwadi which is a town 30km from Amboli and is connected to Mumbai via the Konkan Railway. After having to cancel our tickets due to the landslides in Amboli and getting the trip postponed, we were disappointed when a second landslide occurred. But this time we decided not to let that thwart us and went ahead with our journey with no plans about what to do once we reach there. On reaching Sawantwadi in the evening we checked into a Lodge near the ST Bus Depot, which was also being used by the local pimps and their Prostitutes as we later discovered.(thanks to Jacob's keen ears) The next day we left for Malvan as the road to Amboli was still blocked. After coming back from malvan having enjoyed the Tarkarli beach and scrumptious Malvani Food, we got to know that the road to Amboli had been cleared and so the next day we arrived at Amboli.
Amboli was damp and everything from the Hotel Floor to the bed sheets gave you a sticky feeling when you touched them, in fact Amboli gives you a constant feeling of being wet no matter how hard you try to stay dry, but the worst of monsoon rains seemed to have subsided. We left for a trail into the forest as soon as we had some breakfast. The calls of Malabar Whistling Thrush attracted us towards a road sided by dense vegetation and going into the forest. We spotted a Green vine snake just as we entered the forest, further ahead we spotted nothing else other than
But after having a delightful Malvani Dinner Parkar Sir went straight to have a good night sleep while none of the girls and only two of the boys showed up for the Night Trail. So we started at around 11.00pm with Shantikumar and Johann accompanying me. I remember the look on Johann face when he saw me moving towards the same leech infested Forest trail that we took in the morning but we decided to go for it and we saw a Malabar pit viper on that trail and all those leech bites were worth that find. After going back to the market to have some tea we took the Highway going east to Belgaon and searched along the road.
The forest was resonating with the calls of Bush frogs(Raorchestes sp) and several other species; I was busy photographing things that Johann and shanti were skillfully finding. A beautiful Tusshar Silk Moth attracted my attention, while shanti searched for the Bush frogs and Johann proved that he’s the boss when it comes to spotting spiders as after spotting one spider after another he came across a large and handsomely colored Sparrasid Spider probably belonging to the Genus Heteropoda. Little else was seen after that and therefore we took a diversion 2 kms east of the Amboli to the Hiranyakeshi temple some 4km away with a hope of finding more things, but sadly there was very little forest left along the road and we did not see anything interesting. To make things worst it started raining and we were drenched from head to toe by the time we reached the temple at around 4.30am in the morning. My friends made use of the cobbled stone parapet of a house to catch some sleep while I slept on its veranda, we woke up at 6.00am to discover that our hands and feet had turned white and were numb due to the cold.
Looking back at Amboli and Malvan Excursion I conclude that it was the finest trip I have ever been to with people who had absolutely no Interest in Zoology or at least in the non-textual part of it but it’s good to see that through such ventures these students of zoology are taking interest in Binoculars along with microscopes and are learning things in the Field and not just in the laboratories but on the other hand it’s a matter of great concern that 49 Mining leases had been granted in Sindhudurg District alone before the Environment Minister Mr. Jairam Ramesh ordered a review of Mining leases but if the leases are cleared acres of pristine forests like Amboli are at risk of being lost forever.
- Aditya Malgaonkar
1 comment:
M reading a post of yours after quite a while.Must say your writing skills have improved a lot. :)
For me the para I liked the most was the conclusion coz tht's a fact about students as well as environment. M glad tht there are still few students who try their best to get others interested (instead of considering others as a lost case!) and aware. Nice sightings by ur team.
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