Diveagar

Diveagar (Dive Agar) is a village located in Shrivardhan Taluka, Raigad district in the Indian state of Maharashtra,[2] approximately 170 kilometers south of Mumbai.The area is peaceful, clean and sparsely populated. The region includes a fishing settlement, a beach, a temple, local businesses engaged in coconut and beetle nut tree farming, and some tourism businesses such as restaurants, cottage rentals and hotels, and six villages (from north to south): Velas, Musalmāndi, Agar Panchaitan, Diveagar, Borli Panchatan, and Karle. The beach, facing the Arabian Sea, is approximately four kilometers long[3] and undeveloped. At the north end of the beach where a small stream enters the ocean there is the fishing settlement, Velas Agar, and some paddy farming, while at the south end there is a sanctuary for migratory seabirds. Nearby, there is a small fishing village, where vendors sell fresh fish, which goes by name of Bharadkhol.[4] The beach is accessible from the Mumbai-Goa highway via Kolad or Karnala.

Diveagar Kokan
Village
Country India
StateMaharashtra
DistrictRaigad
Population
  Total4,069[1]
Languages
  OfficialMarathi
Time zoneUTC+5:30 (IST)
Another view of Diveagar beach
Diveagar Ganpati Temple

The beach contains a number of suru trees (Casuarina), which are common to coastal Maharashtra. The access to the beach has a dense cover of belu trees, which are otherwise uncommon in the area.[5]

Diveagar is a popular beach destination from the nearby towns of Shrivardhan and Harihareshwar.

Sand-bubble crabs can be found on the beach and at nearby Harihareshwar one can find dolphins. Some sea turtles still lay their eggs on the beach.

How to REACH: From PUNE - car and public transport like State Transport BUS from Swargat.

History

This village was governed by the Sheelahar Dynasty from 800 A.D to 1265 A.D. Evidences showing more than five hundred year old settlements are found in this region. Since thousand years this village was attacked by the Arabs, the Portuguese and the Mughals. Because of these attacks the whole village was destroyed 3 to 4 times.[6]

The theft of the golden ganesh murti

The golden (suvarna) ganesh murti (idol) of Diveagar Ganpati temple was allegedly stolen by thieves on 24 March 2012. The murthi was later allegedly melted. The golden idol weighed 1.5 kg. The thieves before taking away the golden idol killed the two watchmen who guarded the temple.

The idol has since then been replaced by one made with Silver.

gollark: Basically, the top one transmits the powercell's fullness level (obtained via a computercraft thing since comparators appear to not work) and the bottom one receives that, reads the reactor's buffer level (it was meant to be heat but somehow I just get the RF output buffer level), and if the powercell is below full and the buffer empty it turns the reactor on.
gollark: Some screenshots of the controllers.
gollark: TIS-100 is a weird massively-parallel architecture of nodes running simple assembly programs communicating with each other.
gollark: TIS-3D is basically TIS-100 in Minecraft.
gollark: I'm amazed at how non-terribly my really simple TIS-3D reactor controller runs.

References


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