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Best Rivers in India

Top Rated Rivers

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Reviews

Harshada Kale
at 2023 Aug 06
Harshada Kale
at 2023 Aug 06
Beautiful view... And beautiful place
Kartik Ukirde
at 2023 Jul 20
Kartik Ukirde
at 2023 Jul 20
Beautiful place to visit clean river
Pratik
at 2023 Jun 09
Pratik
at 2023 Jun 09
Best place for:- running, walking & swimming ❤️🚩
Bhaskar Hande
at 2023 Jun 06
Bhaskar Hande
at 2023 Jun 06
Its my village river, had many childhood memories as well swimming memories.
Rajashree Jadhav
at 2022 Jul 23
Rajashree Jadhav
at 2022 Jul 23
I love this place..clam and peaceful..
Gaurav KoRde
at 2022 Feb 16
Gaurav KoRde
at 2022 Feb 16
This river is in my village. Now water level has increased. Good for fishing. Few restaurant near the river. This whole area coverd with leopards. So be careful when you roam alone.
Amol Auti
at 2020 Dec 16
Amol Auti
at 2020 Dec 16
Best atmospere fresh air nature view 100%satisfying
Big bridge over river .
Adesh Shinare
at 2018 Oct 21
Adesh Shinare
at 2018 Oct 21
Nighoj Nighoj is famous for Malganga Temple and Pot Holes  in Kukadi River. The Nighoj Kund is much more famous for Pot Holes . The big pot like shapes made in rock at Nighoj. They are also called as Kund. Kund are the gigantic Potholes which are supposed to be the largest in Asia according geologists. Lot of People from all over world come to see this miracle of god.Nighoj is situated in Parner Taluka(Ahmednagar,Maharashtra,India). Nighoj is 70 km From Pune and near the Shirur. The river Kukdi that flows by Nighoj village in Maharashtra has shaped up beautiful potholes in the riverbed that have fascinated geologists. The villagers, though, don’t understand what the fuss is about EVERY year on Janmashtami, Nighoj village indulges in a little ritual. Over six lakh devotees pour into Nighoj, a village 75 kilometres from Pune in Ahmednagar district, to witness a “miracle”. At the stroke of midnight, villagers claim, an earthen pot filled with water emerges from the main well in the village, the pot is put on display for three days and after a grand procession, it’s immersed into the well so that it rises again the next year. Everyone here vouches for the miracle, saying nobody dares question goddess Malganga. But the goddess herself would have seen bigger miracles—like the small gorges the river Kukdi, a tributary of the Bhima river, has formed over the years. The river, which flows by the village, takes a semi-circular turn less than 50 metres behind the temple, throwing up swirls and water currents that beat relentlessly against the hard basalt rockbed. The river has done this for countless years, giving rise to one of the most fascinating vignettes of geology in the Deccan plateau —beautiful rock formations and several potholes formed by the water flowing through the stone. The potholes—spread over three kilometres with an average depth of over 100 feet—give the basin the look of a canyon.