This was my first night trek. It was thrilling and enjoyable enough for me to be motivated to write about it, albeit a little late!
Unlike as usual, I had the weekend off on Apr 11 & 12. The last trek that that I'd done was in winter, sometime in Nov - months ago! Was itching badly for a good trek. Summer makes things worse for trekking in the Sahyadri. (Monsoon is the best. Winter is good for tougher ones.) Even an easy trek can sap the energy out of seasoned trekkers. So a night trek was the only obvious choice. The places I had in mind were Harishchandragad, Naneghat, Peb (aka Vikatgad) and Gorakhgad. I'm generally averse to an "easy trek." At the some time, since this was my first night trek, I could not afford to bite off more than I could chew. A few phone calls later, asking people if they would care to join, what their choices are and so on, I and Moiz finally decided on doing a night trek to Peb. This would be my 2nd trek with Moiz, a seasoned trekker and traveler by my standards. ;)
The plan was to leave Mumbai by 4:00 PM and start from Neral a little before sunset. That way, we would suffer little heat. Secondly, it would also give us the advantage of some light which would help us in the initial patch where there are chances of getting lost - more so at night..! he he... :) More about that later.
But it was not to be that way. I went off to sleep and probably didn’t set the alarm properly. When I woke up, it was 5:15 PM. I saw missed calls from Moiz and called back. He had assumed that I cancelled our plans at the last moment. We took stock of our situation and decided that we would go ahead with a trek although it was a little late. Question was - should we stick to Peb, or opt for Gorakhgad instead? We decided to stick to doing Peb. There was some risk involved in this, but since I had done Peb before in daylight, I had a fair idea of the route and felt we would be able to manage the tricky part even at night.
I took a local at 7:27 PM from Ghatkopar. Moiz joined me at Dombivli. We reached Neral at 8:45 and had some grub near the station. We started the trek at 9:30.
Here's the inside scoop on how to go about tackling Peb at night. :)
From Neral station, walk towards the right - in the direction of Vangani. At one point after one has left the hustle-bustle near the station behind, take a left and walk across a small maidan and onto a narrower street with shops on either side. (I believe this point is a tax/rickshaw stand - not sure.) One can now see Matheran (left), Peb (center) and Nakhind (right.) One can now see the col between Peb and Nakhind which one has to reach first. Reaching this col is the only slightly tricky part of this trek 'cos it is easy to go off on the wrong track if one is not careful and does not know better. After walking a while along the road, we reached a village. We continued walking along the same road, going right, till I realized we had come a bit too far to the right. I could see the lights of a village which was closer to the col and realized that it was that village we had to reach – not the one we were in. We backtracked a little on the road and then walked across the land in the direction of the lights. There was no need to backtrack all the way on the road. If we had been more alert, we would have spotted the farther village instead of going to the right. Anyways, we did not lose much time due to this.
We reached Kapoor Farm – it is a landmark in the area. We saw a path going in the direction of the hills on the left of its gate. We took that path and soon reached a brick structure which was under construction. Must mention here though that there is always quite a bit of construction going on in these parts and so the paths do not stay as they are. The only thing that can truly guide you is your sense of direction, judgment about which would be the right path and your wits. Of course, you can always ask someone if you're not sure. There are always sooo many people anywhere in India - you just can't escape humanity in this land! There was a pot bellied baba sitting with someone outside this place and we thought of confirming the route with him. As it turned out, he was not a local and did not know the route. He did confirm that we were in the right direction though, so we went ahead after having some water.
Soon after leaving the Ashram behind, we started ascending a hill. There is only a single fairly well trodden path here rather than the confusing criss-cross and mish-mash that one finds closer to the villages. We simply followed this path which went right first before circling and turning left, ascending all the while, till it took us to a small plateau. We now had to begin using our head torches since it was quite dark, esp. in the thickets. We did not have much benefit of the moonlight since the moon, in the waning phase, was almost full but hidden by clouds. Ascending this hill brought us to the first big power transmission tower. I must make special note of these towers now.
More than anything else, it is these power transmission towers that can act as one's guideposts on this trek. They go over the same terrain and roughly the same direction. In fact one of them sits bang on the col between Peb and Nakhind and then the lines go down on to the other side towards Panvel. The path does not go directly below these of course, but the direction is approx. the same during most of the trek till the col. One has to keep note that if you're going too far away from the direction in which the power lines are going, then you're off track. And one should be alert and keep a look out for the path where it seems to disappear or where multiple paths seem to crop up.
After reaching the 1st plateau, we turned right and began another ascent through the hill and thickets to reach a 2nd plateau / flat area. This is larger than the 1st one. The 2nd tower is somewhere here too. We walked straight past the tower, with the path going slightly left, till we reached a point where we crossed a 3rd tower and walking even further we could see the col right in front of us. At this point, it seems easy to think that all one has to do is climb and reach the col in 45-60 mins. But it is not so. There is no proper route to the col from this point. There are many boulders and thickets in between which make it tough to ascend to the col from this point, either from the right or from the left. During the day it is possible to manage an ascent somehow, but at night it is foolhardy.
There is a path which leads towards the area situated directly below the col. This seems to be going in the right direction but is in fact the wrong one. Keep a look out for a path which goes right in the direction of Nakhind rather than Peb. Although it initially seems to be going in the wrong direction and away from Peb, this is the right one. At some point it turns sharply left and then one ascends through a fairly thick jungle following a clearly visible path till one reaches the col via a 4th tower that one passes along the way.
Our problem was that either due to poor visibility, or lack of alertness or being engrossed in talking, or all of these, we missed the point where the path turns left and kept walking straight ahead till we reached a point where a further clear trail was not visible. It was then that stupid me realized we had again gone too much to the right. There was no other option than to backtrack 'cos we were now somewhere below the hills of the broad Nakhind mountain. We decided to backtrack all the way to the 3rd tower so as to be very clear about taking the right route. But we kept a lookout to see if we could find a path on our right which went up. We rested at one point and it somewhere there that we saw the now dry nullah made by the monsoon waters. We figured that the nullah would take us to some point near the col since the water flowed from that direction. So we set off to ascend through the nullah rather than backtrack further which would have cost us 30 minutes or so. Fortunately, after just 2-3 minutes of climbing, the nullah criss-crossed a path which came from below (the one we missed seeing earlier). So we followed the path rather than the rocky nullah till we reached the 4th tower. From the 4th tower, there are again 2 paths. I don't remember exactly now, but we took a path on the left which was ascending figuring it would take us to the col since that was still further up. But that path went in a different direction after a while. Again it turned after a while and started climbing in the direction of the col. It is all quite hazy now in my memory. We were scrambling like crazy through the thickets since we lost the path after a while. We just kept ascending however we could simply knowing that we were in the right direction and could see the mountain ridge up ahead. Fortunately, after about 15-20 mins of this crazy scrambling we accidentally got back on the path again. After that in another 10 mins we were on the col. Finally.....!! Near the col, there are 3 other paths. One goes over the col and down towards Panvel side to a village below. One goes right towards Nakhind along the ridge that connects Peb and Nakhind. The 3rd one, which we had to take, was the one on the left which goes to Peb.
It was 12:30 AM by the time we reached the col. We spent a good 45 minutes there resting, drinking water, eating and chit-chatting. It was very cool, peaceful and much of the topography we had trekked over was visible from this point. From the col to Peb there is no chance of getting lost and it takes just 35-45 mins to reach the caves of Peb from there. The path does go up and down and there are some slightly steep scree ridden paths. When one is almost at the end of the connecting ridge and near the Peb mountain, there is a rock patch that needs to be tackled. It is just 20-25 feet and an easy free climb with plenty of holds - no problem even at night or in the monsoons. After the rock patch, we skirted the mountain wall in front of us and took a path which went to the right. A further walk of 10 mins and we found the caves on the left. Whew..!! It was 2:30 AM when we reached the caves.
We were out of water and so I set off to find water at 3-4 spots near the cave which I knew. Found nothing. I realized that these spots probably held water only in the monsoons and a little after that. We were now faced with the prospect of trekking to Matheran without any water. We decided to sleep for 3-4 hours and set off as early as possible to avoid the Sun. We went off to sleep at 3:00 AM, near the entrance to the caves rather than inside.
We woke at 6:30 AM. Or to be more precise, we were awakened by the Sun and chirping birds etc. soon after Sunrise. As I woke up and sat erect, the most wonderful sight greeted my eyes. This was the best moment of the trek for me. We were in the west and the Sun was in the east on the other side of the mountain, so it was not visible. There was freshness in the air and the quietude was broken only by the sound of birds. Best of all, moonset had not occurred. Since it was not bright daylight as yet, the almost full moon was clearly visible too. And down below we could see the flat lands - villages, fields and the Palasdari lake. Just sitting quietly at this spot for 10 mins was the best of this trek for me.
We quickly packed and set off further for Matheran by 7:00. We also intended to check out another 1-2 places for water which we could not check out at night. Walking further we reached a wall which one has to climb using an iron ladder. There is a tank at the top near the wall but that too was dry. We climbed further and then took a right to get on to the ridge that connects Peb and Matheran. There is a path that again skirts the top area of the hill and goes around it instead. At it's end where we could now see the ridge to Matheran clearly. We saw a path going to the left and leading to a hut. The "hut" is a kinda Ashram set up by followers of Swami Samartha. There was no one around so we freely trespassed and entered the shrine. Lo and behold - the blessed souls who lived here had kept water in a drum inside the shrine..!! We were very thirsty and drank our fill before also filling the bottles. We would not run out of water till Matheran now.
Leaving the hut we walked in the direction of Matheran and after a while met 2 guys. They were the Swami Samartha fellows who lived in the hut. One of them showed me the place where they got the water from. It is very close to the hut, a little below it, and has water all year round. There is enough water for them to take a bath everyday and enough for their 2-3 cattle to drink as well. They invited us for tea which we declined and after ascertaining the route we set off again. It is an easy 1.5 - 2 hours walk to the railway track of Matheran from Peb. One has to descend by an iron ladder at one point where it is rocky. After this descent, the path leads straight to a point where it again skirts the mountain side rather than going up. This is on the west side, so if one leaves early, one is shaded from the Sun after this point. A further 20-30 minute walk brought us to a point on the Matheran railway track at 9:00 AM. The train passes by this point at 9:15. We decided not to risk boarding it as we would have to board it while it was running and also ran the risk of a hefty fine if caught without a ticket. The ticket checker was sure not to let go of relatively rich city folks like us – “Tch Tch… Educated people like you should know better. Now you have to pay a fine.” I am sure they let local folks hitch a ride without any payment.
So we walked along the track till we reached Dasturi Naka. It is the entry point for Matheran where one has to park one's vehicles and leave them behind as they are not allowed in. We reached the Matheran market by 10:15 AM. Had a snack there and roamed around a little before going for an afternoon snooze in the Paymaster Park. Sleeping like bums in a public park on the park-benches was quite an experience. I did not get much sleep though Moiz was fast asleep soon. I could overhear the yapping of a group which came after us and rested nearby. A young boy was wondering aloud why we were not getting disturbed by the insects. To which his mom or aunt or whoever it was, replied "Huh..! It makes no difference to people like these." .. he he... When I later told this to Moiz, he speculated that they probably thought we were drug addicts. Or maybe good-for-nothing bums asleep in a public park 'cos they have nothing better to do in life.
We left the park at 4:30 PM, had a snack in the market and bought soda to make a 2nd round of a heavenly drink (Kokum sherbet with Soda..!) and took a cab down to Neral. I was back home by 8:30 PM.
All in all, a great escape and a resounding success as it was mine as well as Moiz's first night trek.
My Expenses: 49 - Andheri to Ghatkopar rickshaw, 30 - Ghatkopar to Neral return ticket. Sub-total: 79.
Shared Expenses: 70 - restaurant at Neral, 50 - Matheran entry fee, 30 - Diwadkar restaurant, 32 - 2 bottles of soda, 70 - snack in market, 100 - cab from Matheran to Neral. Sub-total: 352. Per head: 352/2 = 176
My total expenses: 176 + 79 = 255.
Cheap, huh? And this was one of the treks where we ended up spending more since we went to a touristy place like Matheran. Else we would not have had to spend more than 150 bucks per head.
Wednesday, May 20, 2009
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7 comments:
I think i seriously envy guys for their freedom when they go around doing things like this... sounds absolutely exciting!
good gosh...!! maybe ur right, but only partially so. i've met quite a few girls who are adventurous - even those who do things like night treks in the sahyadris. seriously.
and i have a female friend who is an inspiration for me. she quit a well paying job to work for far less in an outdoors co. she has travelled solo to quite a few places. and she knows a few girls/women who are even more crazy/adventurous than her. for example, she told me of this woman who climbed a 6000 mtr. plus peak at the age of 40+ about 2-3 years ago. last year, this same woman did one of the most challenging and dream treks in the world solo - just her and a porter cum guide that she hired. this was the snowman trek in bhutan. have heard accounts of other girls / women as well.
it has nothing to do with one's sex, frankly. it's the spirit that you have inside that matters. at one time i too was one of those who thought all this is not for "good girls"... i've changed. if u have an adventurous spirit within, go for it..!! indulge in it, try to let it work it's way in your life and then see the effects. u may not be a great adventurer, but at least push yourself to your own limits.
hmmm.. well, i hope i'm not sounding all preachy you know. just trying to make the point that it is often quite worthwhile to break free from self-imposed limitations. who says girls are not free to do such things?
hehe try my parents.. they'll tell you :D
Well you've succeeded in making me feel like a bit of a loser :)... yeah i know women do these things..i applaud ur friend too...and i know i will someday do such things too.. but its definitely easier for men in this world.. noone questions guys.. its a regular thing.. but you've to look so hard for a woman whoz got to find enuf guts n defiance enuf to do this.. you gotta ask why this is uncommon in women... Well its not coz they dont want to let me tell you...could it be that its coz theres more at stake than a wallet?
Im sorry but i get annoyed when guys live in denial of the reality of women.. Im all for going everywhere alone and following my spirit but it makes my parents cringe with panic and i dont like doing that to them...and hell ive seen enuf crap from men..sitting in a counseling centre for battered women can change the most romantic of us around... dont mean i or other women should give in to the madness.. its just that.. sigh. sorry ive begun on my womens issues class.. hopeless ardent feminist...i should apologize now for being preachy and reactive..:D
you don't want me to risk getting shot dead, do you? :D
and is it my fault if you ended by feeling a bit like a loser? :) that is not what i intended. maybe nudging you into some adventure is more like it!
i got reminded of a conversation i had once which i'd like to share. this was abt 2 yrs ago with a 74 yr old lady who i think has lived a remarkable life. i was going on about how i wanted to earn a livelihood in a more meaningful way, reclaim my life and so on.. but how i was afraid of not being able to earn enough, financial security, of being left behind and unable to cope while the world rushed ahead, not living up to my parents expectations and so on...
she listened patiently to me, then said "so, your parents' fears have become your fears, hmm?" WHAM..!! that was quite a revelation. and how i was refusing to look at it.
so, maybe these fears that you have, of there being more to lose than just a wallet, as you put it, are not your own? if u look at the fears and limitations that you have, you'll probably find that almost all of them are not your own. they have been learnt, conditioned into you. same with me - only that the conditioning would be different. i am not sure how many of them one can overcome. but being aware of them is certainly the 1st step.
but then again, you might accuse me of being in denial of the reality of women.. :D so, i'll say that i do realize things are different for men and women in society. i've not talked much with my friend about her relationship with her parents, their reactions etc. but from whatever little she's told me, i can make out that she has had to fight for her freedom. i don't think it must've been easy, though she does tell me that her family has accepted her for what she is now. her relationship is somewhat strained i guess.
i too feel shocked by the way women are treated by some men, and by society as a whole, including other women. i am sure the battering you talked about does not happen just in the "lower classes" as they are called, though it may be more common there. and there are many covert as well as overt ways in which boys are treated differently. for example, a female colleague of mine is always worried about loss of pay if she does not come to work. she comes to work even when she is sick. i got to know from her friend in office that this is because her parents force her to go to work. they need the money. she even saves up all her leaves so that they can be encashed. and guess what, much of the salary that she earns goes towards paying the education loan for her brother and savings for him. he is studying in the UK. welcome to middle class, white collar society...!!
so, yeah, indian society sucks in this matter. however, i must say that it is not women alone who are always discriminated against. i can think of so many uniquely male problems which men face, and the way men are treated by society, which are never talked about much. for example, have you ever noticed how in most societies, men are treated as the dispensible sex? all the dangerous jobs are done by men - you name it, and it is the men who are seen fit to be sacrificed. women's role is the preservation of the race, caste, nation, whatever...! and in an industrialized society, men are put under as much pressure as women, often more, to consume, meet supposed ideals, earn money, be a productive member of society, take care of wife and kids so that they can live in comfort and so on. as though a man is not supposed to have a life of his own. he is supposed to live for the sake of others - be it his parents, wife and kids or whoever
hmmm... perhaps, i am getting carried away.
i think the problems in the world all stem from one single reason - selfishness and callousness. and all problems are intimately interrelated. so, a person who is really concerned about solutions, would not be concerned about men's issues, women's issues and environmental issues and so on. he or she would be concerned with the totality, the whole. that is the only thing which seems sensible to me.
hi there,
didn't hear back from you on this one.
it is perfectly fine if you have merely chosen not to respond. however, i would like to offer my apologies just in case i have offended any of your sensibilities.
regards
helloz... no no you didnt offend me or anything... i got a lil busy with things. I dont know if i have a response though... have i inherited my parents fears? ive thought about it and have been very careful in considering it.. and id say no. Its proly more my fears for them... it is also in my priority list in life to not hand them more worries than they have. So maybe my generally joking about feeling like a loser is just that.. a joke. I tread a thin line walking my path to my sense of freedom and keeping the people i hold imp in life in the picture of things.
As for the argument on men being treated as dispensible.. do you hear of boys being killed at birth?... million plus missing population of men? Um nope. That would be women. So you decide who is treated as the more dispensible one here. And I think its difficult to equate labour issues. Some tasks women just arent built for... but even then once in a while you'll find em there. No im not saying that men dont have issues... of course they do. Tremendous pressure on guys to follow the lines of masculine behaviour, being bread winners etc. As a feminist it wouldnt be my argument to show men as something below women or even try to equate them.. i think what needs to exist is a sense of equity recognising eachs unique strengths and weaknesses.. yet the manifestation of powers in society do show that the marginalisation and exploitation of women under whatever guises over the centuries has meant that this world runs on the terms of men...
I agree with you that all things are inter-related but i cannot simplify it further than that. I do believe that certain sections are more marginalised than others for it is a fact well played out in society... and while selfishness and callousness might have a part in this game.. it is far more complex than that.
glad to know u were not offended.
i know u were joking... but perhaps u may not have realized that stupid me has a habit of often being more serious than required :) i wonder if that has a cure!
i did think you might talk about female infanticide. it is horrendous. have read some explanations and theories about it but somehow have never been convinced. am always left wondering - how can parents kill their own child? but then i have never experienced extreme poverty, and so don't feel like sitting in judgment on this. i do know poverty is not the only reason behind it though. i think it boils down to this - in a patriarchical society, males are preferred over females and get preferential treatment.
regarding my comment about men being treated as the dispensible sex... i think i had something else in mind as i said that. men, you see, are not capable of giving birth to offspring. to put it crudely and in biological terms, sperm comes by the millions and billions. it is cheap, plentiful and worthless. eggs are relatively rarer and precious. to ensure the survival of any group, caste, nation or whatever, women are indispensible. have you never heard of women and children being the last to be rescued in case of disasters? women being asked to fight for the nation in the name of patriotism? men are brainwashed into that kind of bullshit by other more powerful and cunning men. how many women do dangerous jobs like mining, industrial jobs which have high accident potential and so on? it does not have to do with labour alone, though that does play some part. there are loads of other factors at play here... factors that show how the value of a man's life is considered less than that of a woman.
i often can't help but think that a woman's greatest asset in life is simply the fact that she is a woman. maybe i'm wrong, but i think there is a ring of truth to the saying that "one is born a woman, but one has to become a man" ... or perish! a woman's survival is easier - society as a whole and other men will provide for her. after all, woman is god..! does man have the ability to create life? no. a woman is creativity and mystery personified due to the biological fact of being a woman. and being god makes one deathless. no wonder there are few women philosophers. brooding about death, truth, reality, love, nirvana, moksha... all that kinda stuff would seem such utter nonsense to someone who is like "god"... :) LOL
i think i was also partly using the word selfishness in a sense different than normal. man is the only animal who not only has consciousness but also the consciousness of consciousness. the rest of life lives in a kind of unconscious harmony with the universe. man is the only creature out of harmony. i had once read about how this is what bible meant by the "fall of man" - it is the falling out of harmony with the universe. but then that piece went on to speak of how there is a reason and a purpose behind why evolution let that happen... the purpose being to create a species that would "learn" to be in a conscious harmony with life, the universe. but i often can't help but wonder whether humans are an experiment of nature that went horribly wrong? he he.. :)
so, when i said selfishness is a problem, i was also trying to say that the mere fact of having a sense of "self" is a problem perhaps. an elephant does not have a sense of "self" in the way a human does... and perhaps that is what makes it better than a human.
yeeeeeaaahhhhhhhhhh!!! overload again...?? :)
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