I think it is now necessary to give my readers some geographic clarity. Sindhudurg is a district in the state of Maharashtra on the Maharashtra - Goa border. Malvan is one of it’s eight talukas (taluka : an administrative division, akin to a city). Sindhudurg, the district gets its name from Sindhudurg, the sea-fort. Tarkarli is a fishing village in Malvan with a beach so beautiful that it is locally known as the queen of beaches.
Waking up to a mild, rising sun and abundant greenery is the best part of such over-night bus journeys to the countryside, especially to a concrete jungle-dweller like me. It is a cool morning with a bit of fog. The hilly, gently undulating terrain is clad with varied shades of green – paddy fields, shrubbery covered slopes, palms, banyan trees, even an occasional river.
The sign of things to come: En route to Tarkarli
It’s late in the morning when we arrive at Tarkrli. We check-in at the MTDC resort which is an okayish place. There are some lapses in cleanliness, but our cottage is adjoining the beach and with a view so heavenly, worldly things like a bit of sand on the floor, not-too-clean towels or shoddy service can sometimes be overlooked.
Our boat-shaped cottage
Sitting on the sand, staring into the waves of the sea is such a stress-buster. And with a beach like this it is as good as it can ever get - clean and uncommercialised. The Sawantwadi sea-fort at a distance, on the horizon and the casurina trees gently swaying in the resort behind. I spent a lot of my time lazing on hammocks, listening to the music of the sea.
(photo courtesy: Rajan)
Tarkarli, as I mentioned before, is primarily a fishing village. Peak fishing activity happens early in the morning, but some action is on through-out the day till the sun sets in the Arabian Sea. And some fisher folk are always at work on the beach – singing as they heave the catch out from the sea, gathering their nets together.
All in a day's work
The variety of sea-food is awesome and so is the size of the tiger prawns in the catch. The prawns are nothing short of irresistible. My dad had once told me that the way to determine the freshness of prawn is the ‘straightness’ test. I.e. Freshness is directly proportional to the straightness and the staler they are they tend to curve inwards. But here in Tarkarli, (my vegetarian readers, please excuse me!) the fish is so fresh, it jumps and also, the prawns are not exactly straight, they bend backwards!Prawn Basket
Our 'friendly, neighborhood fisherman'
3 comments:
WOW....Chilli Chocolate just got chillier!!!
This is an awesome post buddy....and totally worth the effort you put into creating it.
This can act as a perfect guide to anyone who wants to visit one of the many beautiful places on the maharashtra coast. You've even described how to get there geographically!!! (Though I will be calling you once before going there myself, to learn the exact route and deviation required to be taken) :)
Whats more....all those photographs have left my mouth watering for a taste of those tiger prawns at 9:30am in the morning!!!......I hate you for that!!!!
Tarkali sounds like a real good getaway, especially for poor Bengaluru dwellers, like me, who live here sans fish, sans beach, sans waterbody :(
Even though I am not such a great sea-food fan, your description makes me want to be there. :-)
SOL-KADHI...aaaah
thats one drink which i can drink every day for as many times as possible..
And when it combines with fish, the flavours are enhanced.
Infact, this post reminded me that I hadn't had Sol-Kadhi for many months now.. so now i should ask mom for it. Hmmmm.. nothing like sol-kadhi garnished with fresh coriander.
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