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Pawankhind Trek __top__ May 2026

If you are lucky enough to trek in the early morning, you will witness the "sea of clouds" rolling into the Pawankhind valley below. It looks ethereal—a white ocean swallowing the very ground where blood was spilled. Trekkers often fall silent here. There is a specific cairn (a pile of stones) near the top, where people leave behind a stone as a mark of respect for the fallen warriors. It is a simple, pagan ritual, but profoundly moving. Reaching the top of Vishalgad is a relief, but not a celebration. The fort is largely in ruins, consumed by the jungle. But the Darwaza (main gate) is intact. On the walls, you can still see the cannonball marks. Standing at the edge of the fort, looking down at the narrow pass you just walked through, the scale of Baji Prabhu’s sacrifice becomes terrifyingly clear.

To stand at the base of Pawankhind is to hear the echo of steel on steel. It is the site of one of history’s most audacious last stands—the (July 13, 1660). Here, a rearguard of 600 Maratha warriors, led by the legendary Baji Prabhu Deshpande , held back a 15,000-strong Bijapur army for twelve hours, allowing their king, Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj, to escape to safety. The Geography of Desperation The trek begins in the village of Umberkhed or Jawali , depending on your route. As you leave the tarmac, the air changes. The modern world—with its traffic and notifications—dies quickly. You enter a corridor of immense lateritic plateaus and dense Anjan trees. The path is a natural fortress: a narrow gorge flanked by the towering ramparts of the Vishalgad fort on one side and impenetrable cliffs on the other. pawankhind trek

Enter , a man whose name is etched into every stone of this valley. He volunteered to hold the pass with just 600 men. His orders were simple: "Do not let the enemy cross until you hear the cannon fire from Vishalgad, signaling the King’s safety." If you are lucky enough to trek in

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