Saturday 9 July 2016

Trek to Mahuli fort

Finding a good location for a day trek with an grade of easy level so that beginners can give a knack to their trekking skills, we decided to trek the Mahuli fort near Asangaon. With eight members ready for joining in as it was a preffered point for beginners, we started planning the trek journey and ended with only six members present at Asangaon station in morning.

          Mehatab,Ketan,Sushant,Me,Aakash,Abhilash(Left to right)

Trail that leads to Mahuli entrance gate with temple on Left side

Entrance gate of Mahuli

Informative board 1
A before-hand idea that exploring the complete fort is not possible in a day made us uncertain due to time factor as we ought to complete it within a day. So to avoid getting late we decided to board 6:24 am Asangaon fast local from Dadar and explore atleast forty to fifty percent of the fort. But we couldn’t make it as some members were out of schedule and failed to reach on time which resulted in missing the 6:24am Asangaon Fast from Dadar, but to our luck Kalyan fast 6:21 am local train was reaching Dadar at 6:35am so we quickly improvised our plan by boarding it with an hope to catch our missed local(Asangaon 6:21 am slow) from Dombivili.

With two members of our group who were expected to board the same train from Dombivili were late thus improvised plan was on the verge of failure, but again to our luck the red signal halted the train at Kalyan for five minutes which in turn helped our members to execute the improvised plan. With five members on time and the sixth member residing in Asangaon, we met him at Asangaon station. Quite lucky to have this trek destination near to his residence.

Several breakfast facilities outside the station are available serving dishes like Missal-pav , Vada-pav, Samosas, Bhajia along with tea and coffee. After having our breakfast at Chetan hotel which was more of dhaba type stall and Misal-pav here was made by local recipe which lacked the actual taste you would expect from it, but worth a try not that bad.

Filled stomach energized us to move ahead to our next step of journey which was to reach Shahpur Bus depot via rickshaw with all members packed into one so we were total seven people including driver inside the auto. There is only one bus that plies to and fro from shahpur depot to mahuli with an interval of 1 hour, so after reaching there at 9:10 am the next bus available to us was expected to commence its journey towards Mahuli at 10 am.

Informative board 2

Informative board 3

Informative board 4
Informative board 5
Relying on auto service seemed to be a good option instead of waiting for a single bus that plies to and fro. But as usual Auto-Drivers started stating different charges as they view trekkers as their potential customers but amongst them were few ready for negotiations. We clinch the deal with maximum amount set to Rs.300 which contributed to Rs. 50 per head. The auto dropped us exactly on the trail where the trek to Mahuli fort starts at 9:45 am and a five minutes walk from there landed us at entrance gate of Mahuli fort.

Start of trek route
The surrounding premise is barricaded and basic directions are marked throughout the region that lies around Mahuli fort helping trekkers to easily navigate throughout the fort and its area. A bore well tap near the entrance gate is available so fill as much potable water as you can the boring part is push and pull mechanism of these taps, but a great way to encourage people to avoid wastage of water.

Small tent on left side of route that leads to Mahuli
There are no human settlements around the trekking route as the area falls under the jurisdiction of Tansa Wildlife Reserve. Different trails were emerging after passing through the entrance gate, with marked boards at beginning of each trail indicating where they would lead, we followed one that directed us to Small Mahuli with a hope  to complete the Big Mahuli at some later point of time as we didn’t planned for an overnight trek.
Route towards Small Mahuli and Big Mahuli gets diverted just at the beginning of the trail so completing both in a day means descending one before ascending the next.

Pond and a bridge passing over it

Rivers, pond and a wooden bridge to cross the river showcased us the natural flora and fauna of the Tansa wildlife sanctuary. A visible pond from our route, followed by trail leading to waterfall made us more enthusiastic about marking the end of the trek by having a plunge in this pond and a fun time near waterfall even before starting the trek.



Route view
                                                 
Route view
Mahuli surrounded by clouds
Weather was pleasant with minor indication of moderate to heavy rains thus we felt good as the thrill to enjoy a trek in heavy rains is an adventure time for every trekker. The good weather and cold breezes didn’t tempt us to take long-breaks so total break time during ascending just spanned around 20 minutes.


Hillock

At 11:20 am a hillock was spotted by us with no trails and only muddy patches throughout it with gradient slope of sixty to seventy degree.
Ketan and I decided to ascend the peak but later Ketan followed the actual trail instead of getting diverted to reach this small peak point maybe he was bit tired by his regular schedule of going out of way.


View while ascending the hillock

Soon Sushant and Mehatab joined in to ascend this small peak which has no clear route, so climb the way you like it. We started to climb it from a point where we predicted the chance of free-fall to base village was minimum, there was no safe route to ascend it, especially when the wet mud starts acting as a grease making you slip every-time you try to ascend. It was like one step forward and two steps back so don’t risk climbing it without proper shoes and gears during rainy season.


View while descending the hillock

My shoes were lacking the required grip to ascend this hillock, Grip was almost lost while trying to ascend further after reaching till half way of this hillock, Mehatab and Sushant ascended in lizard posture by pushing their body weight towards ground thus maximizing the grip and resistance to the downwards pull experienced on legs by muddy route. After climbing this hillock, Mehatab informed that no other alternative route for descending was possible other than one used by us for ascending, so I planned descending from mid-way itself as going ahead was risky.

Mehatab in bushes trying to search stuffs that got clinged into bushes
Descending was much of a challenge rather than ascending as body weight enforces the  downward pulling force exerted by the muddy route during descend. To make descending a bit easy both of them threwed all possible stuffs they could with a hope that I will catch it from mid-way of that hillock, but odd winds flewed the stuff far away from me, with bush plantation nearby the stuff got clinged into it thus preventing a search operation. It was equivalent to descend on playground slide by walking on it while trying your best not to fall. Half hour spent doing thrills on this hillock with rest members waiting ahead on the actual path for us.

Route view
View from hillock

A clear view of fort borders is visible just 500 metres ahead on the path after this hillock. Later at 12:20 pm we reached near the ladder point and felt relieved that we were on the right path, a meager distance of 1 km from this point is the peak point of Mahuli.
Ladder for avoiding tough patches
After reaching peak point at 1 pm, we were astonished to see the huge area to be explored on the peak point it was nearly around 300 acres. With no direction boards available nearby we started wandering around and moved in the direction towards Tansa lake. On our way was a five foot deep water cistern with muddish color water maybe it gets potable after being refreshed during heavy rains/mid rainy seasons.

Route on peak plateau

Route on peak plateau
Route on peak plateau
Route on peak plateau
Fences protecting the solar panels installed

Solar panels installed on peak plateau

View from peak point
Wild turmeric flower spotted on route
Pinnacles on peak plateau passed by us for reaching Palasgad(Pic clicked from Palasgad)
You will have a good view of beautiful mountain ranges nearby while exploring this plateau, we passed a few in one hour walk.

During our ascend there were few mild showers of rain and our lunch session at Palasgad was even interrupted by few droplets of rain. Views from Palasgad provides a good scenery with Tansa River and a lake in background.

Direction indicating route to Palasgad
Way to Palasgad

Palasgad
An overnight trek is preferable to explore the whole plateau, rushing through all points was not our idea so we started descending at 3 pm after having our lunch at palasgad, thunderstorms and heavy rains followed us till late evening.Only one short break of five minutes was sufficient while descending as the rain encouraged us to reach early near the gushing waterfall.
All of us slipped either a bit while few getting injured as the wet mud didn’t provide the required grip. Some wooden sticks which were used as hiking poles prevented some falls.


Waterfall and a pond nearby

Crabs near the riverside area
Water near this waterfall is clean and not muddish color as you would usually find near the wooden bridge. Beware with broken pieces of glasses nearby this pond as there were many which severely injured some of us.

Giant Red velvet mite

Red wiggler worm



Underground world of ants

Fungi spores growing on trees
After spending one and a half hour wonderful time near the pond and waterfall we ended our trek at 6:30pm. We missed last bus to Shahpur depot from Mahuli, so walking towards Manas mandir was the only option as there are other modes of transport available from there. After walking for 20 minutes we spotted a goods tempo passing by the route, on requesting the driver he agreed to drop all of us at Asangaon station in Rs.100/- so we grabbed the deal as it was equivalent to cost of a bus ticket, even bus drops at Shahpur depot and not near Asangaon station.
As one of our member named Aakash resided in Asangaon we visited his house had some refreshments and then boarded the 9:57 pm fast local from Asangaon.

Thus ending our trek with a great exploration time at the peak plateau and gorgeous view from peak point as a reward to ascend Mahuli while keeping some views aside for our next trek.


 Location 
 Mahuli
 Base Village 
 Mahuli in Thane district
 Reaching there
From Asangaon station take auto to reach Shahpur bus depot, then board a bus towards Mahuli.
 Required time
3 hours to ascend Small Mahuli,
5 hours exploration time on peak plateau,
2 hours to descend.
 Facilities
Local tea/cofee facilities available near entrance of Mahuli
Last bus from Mahuli to Shahpur
6:45 pm

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