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Travel Guide » Asia » Mahabaleshwar
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Mahabaleshwar
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(Maharashtra)


Strawberry Fields Forever

I am not surprised to find myself humming Summer Wine in Mahabaleshwar that all-time Frank Sinatra favourite of anyone born before pop descended on the human race. The connection, of course, is strawberries and in Mahabaleshwar the strawberry imagery is both at the subliminal and the material (eye) level. The summer capital of the erstwhile Bombay Presidency engages the senses not just on the strength of its natural beauty but also because of the charming tales spun around its most favoured points. Nature is extraordinarily munificent here rugged hills, steep and sudden falls, forests crowded with plant life, rivers that flow every which way they please.

Though electricity often plays truant up in the Sahyadris, the fabulous weather means never really having to sweat it out just one of the reasons why Mahabaleshwar is always bursting at the seams with tourists. And to think that till a few years back, it used to officially down its shutters in the monsoons. Today, you could go at any time of the year and be assured of a warm welcome and all the hill-station experience you anticipated.
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To See & Do
Taking along a guide for a tour of the hill station might be a good and practical idea, if you can stand narratives liberally peppered with details of who committed suicide from which point, or where a hit Hindi film was shot.

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Sunset Point/ Mumbai Point
  Adults and children come here to ride about on horses, but this place is worth a visit even if it's not time for the daily performance: the sun plays to the gallery every evening. Pratapgad and Makrandgad are etched clearly on the horizon.

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Arthur's Seat
  Named after British actor Arthur Malet, this picturesque point was destroyed in an earthquake in 1967. The grilled area marks the point where Arthur would sit and ponder the nature of the wind. Apparently, so fascinated was Arthur by the fact that the wind returned everything, he jumped from the point to see if it would throw him back as well. Apocryphal or not, even now visitors to the point fling their handkerchiefs to the wind to be duly brought back by Arthur's nemesis.

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Points to be noted
  Mahabaleshwar has almost 30 designated sightseeing spots, from Hunter Point, with its clear view of Pratapgad Fort, to Mahabaleshwar's highest, Wilson Point, which offers a spectacular view of the twin peaks of Makrandgad. Malcolm Point is named for Mahabaleshwar's First Citizen, who loved these hills. There are several references here to this British officer who founded the hill station, and though it is fitting that Mahabaleshwar should remember him kindly, his house, built in 1839, is now in a state of neglect. Quaint names like Kate?s Point and Marjorie Point abound, and lest one forget that Mahabaleshwar was once the summer capital of the Bombay Presidency, there are even spots named for the Presidency's Governor Lord Elphinstone and a memorial to General Lodwick, town mayor of Bombay Presidency. Just a little further from Lodwick Point is the Elephant's Head Point. Perfect settings for small picnics.

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Venna Lake
  On the Mahabaleshwar-Panchgani Road, Lake Venna is the ideal place for an evening outing after you are done with all points, high and low.

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Mahabaleshwar Temple
  Little girls form a circle around you as they implore you to buy their flower baskets for offering to Shankar Bhagwan. The ancient Shivaling inside the temple is a natural formation and over 500 years old.

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Panchganga Mandir
  Panchganga Mandir is situated at the confluence of five rivers the Krishna, Gayatri, Savitri, Koyna and Venna. The water from these rivers pours from the spout of a sculpted cow suckling its young one, and collects in a cistern below. You can also see the separate outlets of the rivers at the temple. This natural setting is considered very auspicious and devotees throng the temple through the year. There's a bustling marketplace nearby. Also look out for Morarjee Castle, where Mahatma Gandhi stayed when he visited Mahabaleshwar in 1945, and the colonial-style bungalows built during the Raj.
Content Source: 
Outlook Traveller
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Purba Dutt
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