Today on 13th day of June 2015, I was excited to visit
the Elephanta caves with my colleague.
We decided to meet at Andheri station at 7:00 am in the
morning and board a train towards churchgate from Andheri,I was eager for the excitement more than usual as it was
a journey with my colleague whom i was going to meet after a year.
All the excitement and the plan delayed!(was in so deep sleep
that the alarm just didn’t ranged for a dead person like me! Got an where about call
from friends at 6:50am)
So the day begins with a wake-up call and with no preparations,
due to procrastination of packing the required material for trip and the haste
of trip in mind moved the things faster than usual, Just got ready within 20
minutes and left to Goregaon station to board a train for Andheri.
Reached Andheri and a small talk with friends happened on the
way while boarding the next fast local towards Churchgate from Andheri.
Boarded the train from andheri at 7:50 am don’t remember the exact
time of train, reached Churchgate at 8:30 am and loaded some snacks at the Churchgate station
to for our journey.
We then went to board a taxi for gateway of India at the taxi stand, decided to take a shared
taxi with charges of Rs.10 per head, which took 10 minutes to reach the
destination.
After reaching gateway of India at 8:55 am, we purchased a ferry ticket
to Elephanta island which was Rs. 160 for round trip, the tickets were sold by
the agents standing to the left side of gateway of India there were 2 agents in
the morning but while returning time there were around 4-5 agent selling
tickets. No need to find them they keep shouting like "boat ka ticket boat
ka ticket" or "Elephanta ka tickets".
The first ferry to Elephanta island is at
9:00 am and the ferry from the island to gateway of India is at 12:00 noon and
the last ferry is at 4:00 pm and 5:00 pm
respectively. These ferries are at interval of 1 hour as per officials timings,
but we observed that there were ferries at interval of 10 minutes maybe the
frequency got peaked due to increased number of tourists.
After purchasing tickets it was sharp 9:00 am and the boats were
ready for their first trip to Elephanta caves, the crews were anchoring the boats so as to make it
convenient for everyone to board on the boat. The distance from gateway of
India to Elephanta island is 14km(8.5 miles).
We all in haste were the first to board it to manage a seat on upper deck by paying Rs.10 extra to
the boat operator but it’s worth the view. There were around total 50-60
persons in the boat with most of the people as tourist and some were local
vendors transporting cold drinks and other stuffs to island.
The enthralling ride through the Arabian Sea started leaving the hustle and bustle of Mumbai to a journey back in time, the ferry gives view to gigantic Naval Ships anchored to the base at various docks such as Mazagaon, Victoria, Pirpau Jetty and Butcher Island.
A passenger boat |
The enthralling ride through the Arabian Sea started leaving the hustle and bustle of Mumbai to a journey back in time, the ferry gives view to gigantic Naval Ships anchored to the base at various docks such as Mazagaon, Victoria, Pirpau Jetty and Butcher Island.
Mazgaon Dock |
There is no roof for the upper deck of the boat so as the rain started heavily it was difficult to prevent from getting wet even with an umbrella as the sea winds were too harsh in the middle of the sea added the bobbing of boat makes it difficult to balance yourself, so we just got on the lower deck and the view from there was not bad as we thought and it was a pleasant experience to enjoy the view from the lower deck too.
The color of water resembles the color of mud
and the water is completely polluted with the waste in it which you will see
throughout the route.
View from lower deck |
Genmar Phoenix- Crude Oil Tanker |
AHTS Excelsior |
Elephanta Island |
There is a ticket counter that charges you the entry fee for the island (entry fee for the caves is
excluded) it is Rs.5 for adult, Rs. 3 for children, Rs.1 per head for
children’s who come for picnic arranged by schools. The charges are same for
NRI.
The island has 3 temples Shivji, Gaondevi and
Someshwar, a Dam and is home for 2000 people inhabiting across 3 villages on the island. The people
here depend on the business from tourism, agriculture and most of them come far
from the island to Mumbai for education, work etc. The local people have no
facility on the island except the electricity which is provided hardly for 4-5 hours, generated using a diesel
generator. The island has an Elephanta dam which supplies drinking water to the
locals here.
These local people use the boat for travelling to and fro from the
island. So these boats are running throughout the year and stops only when the
water route for the island experiences harsh winds of the monsoon seasons, But
when the last of the wooden ferry boats leaves at nightfall for the mainland 14
kilometres (8.5 miles) away, the villagers who live permanently on the island
are plunged into darkness.
After passing the ticket counter there is a toy train available which is hardly 400 metres train journey. Its ticket cost is Rs. 10 and till the time it starts you
would reach the train destination point. When we reached at 10:00 am the
servicing of train was been performed to make it operational for the day. So we
decided to walk along the way so that we could enjoy the scenic view.
At the entry there are many small shops which sell eatable items
such as star fruits, java plum,
roasted sweet corn, mangoes(seasonal based fruit), raw mangoes and
berries sprinkled with chillies and salt and rates are normal and
are sold at the same price as what you would get it at gateway of india.
The price is Rs.10-15 on average for chopped pieces of these
fruits. The packaged foods such as chips and cold
drinks prices are 50% more than the MRP. The charges above MRP are due to the
transportation cost to the island.
There is a garden and 3 restaurants adjacent to the stairs which leads to the
Elephanta caves. The average meal cost will be between Rs.300 - Rs.400 and the
quality is normal and not that cheap.
These stairs are neatly carved
and provide a stronger grip so you can walk or run on
them easily, there is also a chair service available for persons who have
difficulty climbing the stairs. There are troops of monkeys on the first few stairs
maybe due to the availability of food items in nearby shops. If you purchase an
eatable item here from these shops keep it in your bag before leaving the shop
else the monkeys will follow you if they find something interesting in your
hand.
There are around 200 stairs just a guess didn’t made an attempt to
count those, finished climbing in 12-15 minutes. There are around 100-150 stalls lined along
the sides of these steps selling beautiful artifacts,
paintings, jewellery, Indian traditional souvenirs, bags and much more and if you climb on by
looking the interesting items that are been displayed by these stalls it would
take much more time.Just remember to bargain before purchasing
anything.
Monkeys sitting on a tree |
As you finish climbing the steps you can see the board of
Elephanta caves been displayed on your right side this is starting point of
caves and you would not see a single vendor or any kind of shop ahead this
point.
You need to buy the entry ticket to cave from the ticket
counter over here. It’s Rs. 10 for adult and Rs.5 for children it’s free for
children below 15 years of age and for NRI it is Rs. 250.
Board put up by ASI near the main cave |
The first cave is the main cave with nine carved structures and
a “Shiv Pind”, it will take probably 60% of your cave's viewing time. The
structure of the carvings is severely destroyed and one could barely understand
what they depict by observing it.
It’s better if you avail the guide service for understanding them. The guide service is generally free but we didn’t found a free guide and we paid Rs. 150. The guide explained it well for about 30 minutes in detail and was a bit boring in between to remember the list of names of the people associated with the history of these caves.
The Main cave |
Shiva as Mahayogi |
Nataraja |
Ardhanarishwara |
Maheshmurti |
It’s better if you avail the guide service for understanding them. The guide service is generally free but we didn’t found a free guide and we paid Rs. 150. The guide explained it well for about 30 minutes in detail and was a bit boring in between to remember the list of names of the people associated with the history of these caves.
One point which stunned me was the excellent craftsmanship of the people who carved
these rocks beautifully even before the discovery of
metals,
they were carved completely using a small hand-made piece out of hard stone and
took 120 years to complete it, the geometric aspect of the caves and the angles of
the pillars in which they are carved out is amazing.
The main cave is carved with a precise geometrical calculations in such a way that the first ray of sunlight that enters the cave touches the "Shiv Pind" inside this cave, the pillars are constructed in an angle that if you view from any corners of the main cave you will see the face of at least one carved idol.
The main cave is carved with a precise geometrical calculations in such a way that the first ray of sunlight that enters the cave touches the "Shiv Pind" inside this cave, the pillars are constructed in an angle that if you view from any corners of the main cave you will see the face of at least one carved idol.
There is a booklet of ASI(Archaeological survey of
India) available at the ticket counter which you can purchase, it contains much
detailed description of the caves.
There are security guards protecting these
structures from people who write
their names on these beautiful historical monuments while some people even
climb on these carved structure just to take the close view of the carved scenes
around them, No these climbing people are not monkeys these events happen and
were described by the security guards when we interacted with them.
Left subcave |
These are the pillars that were built by the Govt. of
India later with the permission of UNESCO. As it is a World heritage site
the changes here can’t be done directly by the government of India and if there
are any changes to be made then the change request is sent to the UNESCO(agency of
United Nations). The request is then inspected by the UNESCO officers and if the
change is utmost necessary then the request for change is approved.
UNESCO needs that these monuments be maintained as they were left
by the Portuguese after destroying and not alter anything as it represents the precious
historical details.
The way to Canon hill was closed during our visit
for unknown reasons, so we couldn’t see the Canon at the Canon point which is
the highest point of island. The trip to Elephanta cave was an beautiful
experience and it’s the must visit place for historians.
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