▼ Weekend Getaways
Plan your weekend
 

Travel Guides

nothing lonely about the planet
Travel Guide » Asia » Alibaug
Explore: The World | India
Alibaug
book a hotel
(Maharashtra)


Bhajias on the Beach

Nature has a habit of tempting and tantalising you, and literally supplying wings to your imagination, but Alibaug, where nature, religion and history share an easy camaraderie, lets you have your head in the clouds without letting your feet stray too far from the ground. The vast water stretches in Alibaug lure you with the promise of dreamy, somnolent afternoons, punctuated with lazy sips of cool coconut water and bhajias on the beach, even as the temples up in the ghats soothe all who make the effort to reach their sanctum. A promise that they never fail to keep.

This sylvan seaside getaway has long tried to please all comers, so whatever your fancy, some avatar of Alibaug will present itself before you. So if it's an active weekend you prefer, or a spiritual retreat, or even a journey into Maratha history, Alibaug has it.

After all, not for nothing did Salim Ali, India's best known ornithologist, spend the better part of his life watching birds here. And not for nothing have the modern-day maharajas of Mumbai built their Weekend-Getaways-on-Sea by the shores of the Arabian Sea in Alibaug.
book a hotel
|
Getting There
|
To Do & See
|
Lower Than Davy Jone's Locker
The man who founded Alibaug belonged to the Angre family, appointed commanders of the Maratha Navy in the time of Shivaji himself. Kanhoji Angre was a much-revered and much-feared Sarkhel (Maratha navy chief), so powerful that Alibaug was almost an independent principality under him.

Unfortunately, as Kanhoji Angre?s seven-generations-removed descendant Shahjirao Angre laments, the town has not remembered the Sarkhel and his towering achievements too kindly. Angre lies buried a mere 5 minutes from today?s bus station at Kelkar Naka. The memorial there to Darya Samrat Sarkhel Kanhoji Angre, a raised, black stone structure is crumbling under the effects of the monsoon and improper upkeep. Just outside the stone boundary that encircles the samadhi thrives a busy market.

You might like to visit Angre?s home, a brisk 5-minute walk from his samadhi, where remnants of 17th-century architecture (ornate and beautifully carved wooden doors) and objects still occupy pride of place. However, entry is at the discretion of the present owners.
Content Source: 
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by: 
Purba Dutt
Best viewed in 1024 x 768 pixels screen resolution and IE 6.0 and above