Posted on: 27 April 2014

'Mahableshwar. Sydney and Elphinstone Points from Elphinstone Cottage. 14 November 1871'.

Water-colour painting of Mahabaleshwar by John Frederick Lester (1825-1915), December 1868. This image is from an album of water-colours made between 1865 and 1877 in Kathiawar, Bombay, Poona, Mahabaleshwar and Savantvadi State. The album cover is lettered in gold: 'Sketches' and inscribed inside the cover: 'J.F. Lester'.

Mahabaleshwar is a popular hill station situated at a height of 1372 metres in the Western Ghats in Maharashtra, western India. It is one of the wettest places in the mountains as it receives heavy rainfall in the monsoon season. This area was made an official British sanatorium in 1828 and became a popular retreat for Europeans escaping the heat of Bombay (Mumbai) and Poona (Pune). Mahabaleshwar's famous ‘points’ offer breathtaking views of mountains covered with evergreen forests and fertile valleys.

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Wow

This mountain is still a tourist attraction and most tourist guides refer to it as Dinosaur. If you look closely it does look like back of a Dinosaur