Photo essay: exploring Mumbai’s rivers on kayaks

Kayakers in Mumbai find that water sports go hand in hand with preservation of our environment.

A short trip to a small island off Tarkarli in Sindhudurg District along coastal Maharashtra a few years ago introduced me to the sport of Kayaking. This first experience led me to explore how I could continue with the sport in Mumbai itself. The Walduni canal, not far from my home in Ulhasnagar would have been very convenient, but it is too polluted to be safe for kayaking. So my eyes were set on the Ulhas river, further down.

A fisherman at work on the Ulhas river (Photo: Deepak Malani)
(Photo: Deepak Malani)

Two years ago I got an inflatable kayak, and soon picked up the basics of water safety through interacting with a friend Pradip Patade who is also a marine ecology enthusiast. I started paddling in the Ulhas river and its tributaries, Barvi and Bhatsa, with the guidance of a few fishermen who rely on these waters for their livelihood. Currently, most of the kayaking I do happens on the gentle flowing and relatively cleaner waters of the Bhatsa.

Inflatable kayak (Photo: Deepak Malani)

The Bhatsa river emerges from the Bhatsa Dam, one of three major reservoirs that supply domestic water to Mumbai (the others being Tansa and Vaitarna). The river itself is estimated to be about 40 km long, meandering through several villages. Kayaking on a river is relatively permission-free, but people need to be sensitive and refrain from interfering with the local activities of the villagers, like their washing of clothes, scrubbing of livestock, and so on.

(Photo: Deepak Malani)
(Photo: Deepak Malani)

While water-sports clubs along the Mumbai seafront have not reopened since the lockdown, river kayaking is quite accessible through the year. The kayaking activity base is set in Vasind, 75 km from Mumbai, off the Mumbai-Nashik Highway.

I am now leading an initiative to enable Mumbaikars to explore rivers by paddling in waters with watercrafts, with support from sports leaders of a Decathlon store in Thane. Incidentally, this store is one of the few in Mumbai that offers an affordable range of recreational kayaks.

Over the last two months, we have enabled close to a hundred Mumbaikars (including those as young as 8-11 years old) to experience kayaking for the first-time. We aim to have a thousand Mumbaikars experience the river waters with us, in the coming year.

(Photo: Deepak Malani)

The river ecology is diverse. We’ve seen a variety of species of birds, insects (butterflies, dragonflies, etc.) reptiles, fish and other creatures around the river belt.

Red-wattled Lapwing (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Little Grebes (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Common Sailor butterfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Common Pierrot butterfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Gram Blue butterfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Common Clubtail dragonfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Roseate Skimmer dragonfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Blue Dasher dragonfly (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Striped-leg grasshopper (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Bee/Hornet pollinator (Photo: Pradip Patade)
River crab (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Eel fish (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Slender rasbora fish (Photo: Pradip Patade)
Long-legged cricket frog (Photo: Pradip Patade)

Every trip, we spot something new. And every trip we feel more committed to the preservation of the ecosystem along the river, and reversal of the degradation that we observe.

Also read:

Comments:

  1. Sudesh Pansare says:

    Great initiative

  2. Vipin Gemini says:

    Amazing initiative Deepak.
    Getting connected to nature and helping people to get connected without creating any pollution in water resources, hats off to you for this. Thanks for creating such opportunities.

  3. Madhukar Dhuri says:

    are there any kayaking sessions this weekend 20/21 april 2024?

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Similar Story

Vote for clean air, water security and nature conservation: Environment and civil society groups

The youth of the country will bear the brunt of climate change impact in the absence of government action, say voluntary groups.

The country is going to the polls in one of the most keenly watched elections of all time, and a collective of 70 environment and civil society organisations have appealed to voters to assess the threat to the environment and ecology when they cast their votes in the Lok Sabha 2024 elections. Here is what the organisations have said in a joint statement: As Indians prepare to vote in the Lok Sabha elections this year, it is very important to think of the future of our democracy, especially the youth and their right to clean air and water security in…

Similar Story

Sanjay Van saga: Forest or park, what does Delhi need?

Rich in biodiversity, Sanjay Van in Delhi is a notified reserved forest. Here's why environmentalists fear it may soon be a thing of the past.

The Delhi Forest Department has officially notified the Delhi Development Authority (DDA) about reported tree cutting activities at Sanjay Van. The forest department's south division has verified the claim, citing an infringement of the Delhi Preservation of Trees Act (DPTA) 1994, due to the unauthorised felling of trees in Sanjay Van, Mehrauli, New Delhi. According to officials, the alleged incident came to light through the vigilance of environmental activists. The accusations stemmed from a volunteer organisation called "There is No Earth B," which conducts regular cleanup campaigns at Sanjay Van. With a volunteer base exceeding 1,500 individuals, the group engages…