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Visiting Fairyland on Umngot River in Dawki, Meghalaya - Thrilling Travel

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Discover one of the cleanest and beautiful rivers of India - the Umngot river in Dawki, Meghalaya. A ride on this crystal river is like visiting Fairyland.
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Visiting Fairyland on Umngot River in Dawki, Meghalaya - Thrilling Travel Skip to Main Content Search for: A Travel BlogWell-nighTravel Experiences, Destinations, Tips & Travel Fun HomeWell-nighMe Travel Themes Art & People Beaches Cities Culture Heritage Nature Stays Tips Continents Africa Mauritius Morocco Asia Bhutan Cambodia Jordan India Andamans Andhra Pradesh Delhi Goa Gujarat Jammu & Kashmir Karnataka Kerala Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Meghalaya Rajasthan Tamil Nadu Telangana Uttarakhand Uttar Pradesh Indonesia Israel Malaysia Nepal Singapore Thailand UAE Australia Europe Austria France Hungary Iceland Italy Netherlands Switzerland UK North America Canada USA Published Work Media & Awards Work With Me Contact Me Menu HomeWell-nighMe Travel Themes Art & People Beaches Cities Culture Heritage Nature Stays Tips Continents Africa Mauritius Morocco Asia Bhutan Cambodia Jordan India Andamans Andhra Pradesh Delhi Goa Gujarat Jammu & Kashmir Karnataka Kerala Madhya Pradesh Maharashtra Meghalaya Rajasthan Tamil Nadu Telangana Uttarakhand Uttar Pradesh Indonesia Israel Malaysia Nepal Singapore Thailand UAE Australia Europe Austria France Hungary Iceland Italy Netherlands Switzerland UK North America Canada USA Published Work Media & Awards Work With Me Contact Me 22 Jun 2017 Visiting Fairyland on Umngot River in Dawki, Meghalaya by Ami | posted in: Asia, India, Meghalaya, Nature | 96 Just picture this – a wend that takes you withal a jeweled stream that has some magical creatures floating unelevated and stunning jewels that lie at the marrow of the bed. As you bladder along, you encounter sparkling cascades that waif lanugo from stunning hills that are covered with untried trees. Dotting the scene are twittering beauties and fluttering fairies. Further, you spot mysterious coves subconscious between the ridges of the hills – Mesmerizing? You might think that this kind of land exists only in Fairy Tales. Hey! You are so wrong. I did visit one of these. Right here – in this life, in India. Welcome to the fairyland in Dawki, Meghalaya. Umngot River, Dawki Dawki is a small verge town withal the India- BangladeshVergein Meghalaya. The town is a hot spot for trade between the two nations but in reality, has a lovely fairyland enclosed within.Tropicalto the cleanest village of Asia – Mawlynnong, I managed a magical visit to this place. The magic truly lies in the gorgeous river that flows out here. Popularly referred to as the Dawki river, its very name is Umngot River. The river is where the fairyland lies. The Emerald stream – Umngot River in Dawki The well-spoken Dawki River The Umngot River is considered as one of the cleanest rivers in India. One squint at it and you will stipulate that it definitely is. Not just the cleanest but one stunning river. A natural divide between Jhantia and Khasi hills, this river flows into Bangladesh through Dawki. They say that on a good day, the water of Dawki river is so well-spoken that the boats floating on it, squint as if they are on a crystal glass surface. A lot of these pictures can be accessed on the internet. Having seen some of those, I really wanted to see this for myself. Sadly, it had been continuously raining when we planned a trip there and I did not see the river in its full glory. However, what I did see blew my mind! Journey to Dawki Waterfall withal the way to Dawki A little sad without leaving the trappy village of Mawlynnong, we set out for our last destination in Meghalaya – the stunning Dawki river. I tried to think positive as the car set off withal the winding roads that led to the verge of India. The momentum kept getting us closer and closer to the Bangladesh plains that I had first spotted from Mawlynnong village. The sight of the same had my little 11-year-old minx curious and she splash into a tirade of questions on how, why and what well-nigh Bangladesh. The only time she stopped was to gasp at the lovely waterfalls that lined our paths. The last one completely had her dumbstruck for it was this huge one that fell right abreast the underpass we had to cross. With a quick photo op, we bundled when into the car to ride in silence for the next couple of minutes till we lay vision on a curved emerald stream! First Sight of the Umngot River Flowing between two hills was a well-spoken emerald stream. Silent and calm, sparkling in the sun,Untriedyet clear, so far yet near. The first sight of Umngot River in Dawki The Umngot river may not have been well-spoken as I had seen in the internet pictures, but it sure was stunning.Planethough you might have seen pictures, seeing something this trappy in reality was just a variegated feeling. It really felt too good to be true. The untried of the river shone under the sun and was only accentuated by the colorful boats that lined its shore. The only way I wanted to ensure that I was not dreaming was to rush lanugo to the river and touch it! Gliding withal the Dawki River The voyage withal Dawki River Yes, it was a reality. I was in Fairyland. The transparent, emerald stream was a path through a magical land. Eager to see it, we topside the snake boat. The boatman perched himself at one corner, upper whilom the emerald surface and pushed off towards paradise. It is funny how the shape of the wend and the position of the boatsman widow to the magical fervor of the place. It was scrutinizingly as if he was suspended whilom the jeweled surface of Dawki river. The first few movements had my daughter shriek but soon she got enveloped in the magic of Dawki. The Magic of Dawki RiverSubconsciousalcoves and cascades withal the Dawki River The river bed was strewn with deep round pebbles and stones. It was evident from the surface itself that they were colorful – possibly gemstones subconscious yonder underwater. Around the glistening rivers, we spotted mysterious alcoves – the kinds that elves and fairies hibernate in.Untriedon the outside, with a curtain of a cascade, the moist walls of these tiny grooves shone when at us – scrutinizingly beckoning us to come and explore. The only sounds of the valley were the gentle swishing of the river and the melodious calls of the birds.WithalDawki River Sindabad’s island withal Dawki The Pebbled Island of Dawki The wend ride took us to a small island which I fondly term as Sinbad’s Island. You might have heard of the legend of Roc in the famous One Thousand and One Nights, where Sinbad the sailor got trapped on the Island of these huge birds that had equally huge eggs. That is where he found the treasure that he carried when home. Well, looks like I landed on the same island full of Roc Eggs. Amidst the Pebbles of the Isle of Dawki Stunning, trappy and unbelievable! The island was full of round pebbles that I had seen older in the Dawki riverbed. What made the whole scenario wondrous was that they were of trappy colors. I checked with the wend man on how did these land here. He said – They were unchangingly there! Now, if that is not magic, then I really do not know what is! Magical isle of DawkiWhento Reality at the Indo-BangladeshVergeThe Dawki Suspension BridgeWithoutthe Island visit, we completed a tour of the rest of the river. That brought us when to reality as we sailed unelevated the famous Dawki bridge, synthetic by the British in the 1930s. The suspension underpass can handle only one vehicle at a time. The cross-over leads to the official India border. The Bangladesh verge at Tamabil, near Dawki in India The end point of the Dawki river is well marked with a BSF zany on the shore. It is vastitude this that we are not unliable to navigate and our wend turns back. Interestingly, the Dawki river seamlessly turns undecorous as it enters Bangladesh Dawki river as it enters Bangladesh. Notice the gradual transpiration of untried to undecorous in the river. Reluctantly, I got when to reality and headed when to our car. Honestly speaking, for those few moments, I had forgotten that I was a girl from Bangalore, here on a trip with my family. I felt that we just belonged here. And plane now, as I recount this experience, I finger as if I had dreamt it all. My pictures are the only proof of my visit there. Everything else does finger like a fairytale. However, without this visit, I do think Fairyland exist and that Fairy Tales are true! Getting here Dawki can be washed-up as a day-trip from Shillong. On how to get to Shillong, refer to this post of mine. You can rent a taxi from Shillong that can take you here and bring you back. Travel Tips The weightier time to visit this place is from October to May. During Monsoons, the level of water is quite upper and voyage is suspended. The island too, gets submerged during monsoons. Combine a trip to Dawki with the Living Root Bridges of Mawlynnong. You can plane visit Mawlynnong village as a part of this day trip. I would highly recommend a stay in Mawlynnong as it is a delightful wits in this cleanest village of Asia. A day trip does not really do justice to it. You can get in touch with North East Explorers or stay options here. There are no restaurants or restrooms tropical to Dawki, unless you throne to Dawki village. The climb lanugo to Dawki river can be steep for some – expressly the aged. There are no uniform steps. The wend ride in Dawki can forfeit you anything between INR 500 to INR 750 per boat, depending on the season. When visiting the Indo-Bangladesh border, remember to stick to the rules of the BSF. Do not venture vastitude the point indicated by them.       Like this:Like Loading...Share the Thrill of Travel299Shares299Shares Dawki, Mawlynnong, Places to see in Meghalaya, Things to do in Meghalaya, Umngot River Previous Post Next Post 96 Responses Dannielle | While I'm Young June 22, 2017 | Reply Wow, it’s so tranquil! I love your pictures too, and thanks for the tips well-nigh monsoon season. Ami June 22, 2017 | Reply Thank you Dannielle. Glad you liked the pics. xhobdo June 22, 2017 | Reply Wonderful place. Truly trappy pics. Thanks for the informative post, Ami June 22, 2017 | Reply Thank you Rupam. Esha Mookerjee-Dutta June 22, 2017 | Reply Gorgeous pics and a unconfined post, Ami! Your blog is simply amazing. I am going to bookmark this post for my reference as we are planning to visit Shillong sometime this year. and this will surely come in handy. Ami June 22, 2017 | Reply Thank you Esha. Glad you liked this and the blog. Your compliments made my day. Stay tuned to it as I share increasingly posts on Meghalaya that might be useful to you. BellyBytes June 22, 2017 | Reply Words can’t describe the eyeful you have captured in this trip. Thanks so much for sharing your travels. I have visited Meghalaya, long surpassing it was created, and your post makes me want to make this trip again. Ami June 22, 2017 | Reply Thank you. You just made my day with your compliments 🙂 Jyotirmoy Sarkar June 23, 2017 | Reply Never heard well-nigh this, its really wonderful. Very nicely captured. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply One of our secrets Jyotirmoy. Thanks for dropping by. Tami June 23, 2017 | Reply India really is a land of many contrasts. This is not the typical scene when one thinks of India, but it sure is incredibly beautiful! Ami June 25, 2017 | ReplyVeritablyTami. Most people think of the Taj or the Rajasthan palaces. At the most Goa and Kerala. There is so much increasingly to India than these. And some of it is stunning. Thanks for stopping by. asoulwindow June 23, 2017 | Reply I have been hearing a lot well-nigh Dawki lately. It is an encouraging sign to see increasingly and increasingly travelers heading to North East India. Sindbad’s Island is so beautiful. I can spend a week here. I love confines and would love to see India- Bangladesh border. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Sadly there is no way to stay on the island. And I believe it submerges in monsoon. 🙂 Guess you will either have to stay in Mawlynnong or Dawki of which the first one is amazing! swatisinha09 June 23, 2017 | ReplyUnconfinedpics and flipside trappy place to visit in Meghalaya ! Thanks for sharing this and making us all believe in Fairy tales then 😉 Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thanks Swati. This place is just amazing! Rajat June 23, 2017 | Reply Great.. It is good to see that finally, the North East India is picking up its recognition among many people. Having served there for 3 years myself, I have vivid memories of NE India. Shillong is among my favourites without Arunachal. Actually, the farther you go towards the Himalayas, the increasingly wanderlust it gets and the cleaner the water. I suppose it is only meant for the lucky few to experience, or may the daring few… Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply I hope to do one state at a time. This time it was Meghalaya. Next…don’t know but hope to manage Sikkim and then maybe Arunachal. The pristine eyeful of these places is unmatchable. Cheers Rajat June 25, 2017 | Reply Did both of them. You can start with Sikkim. Infact, weightier time for Sikkim would have been between Feb and April, considering they have the International Flower Festival there. Worth attending.. Tawang, October, if you like ice skating.. But for a sunny weather, this is right time..WithoutAugust, it gets really rainy (with lots of leeches)….. Do not miss Nuranag, Sela and Jaswantgarh.. I spent 8 months serving there.. Spectacular.. All the weightier Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thanks Rajat. Will definitely consider these ambujsaxena05 June 23, 2017 | Reply You have a knack for capturing the eyeful of the place without putting a word on the paper! I had heard mainly well-nigh the Living Roots underpass in Meghalaya surpassing this post! I’m glad to have known the place where Sinbad found his treasure. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply I don’t know if Sinbad did find it or not but I sure did! Thanks Ambuj for your lovely compliments. Cheers WorldGlimpses June 23, 2017 | Reply You say “just picture this” and then post such wonderful photos! Didn’t need to imagine anything, was just staring! 😀 Stunning! This is one wondrous landscape really and those photos of yours are lovely, as usual. 🙂 Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply 🙂 Well, I should have said – Fantasize this. Thanks for the compliments on the pics. Frankly I don’t think they did justice to the place. Mariyam June 23, 2017 | Reply This is a fairyland indeed. I’ve unchangingly dreamt of visiting a place like this. The pictures perfectly describe the eyeful of this place. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thank you Mariyam. You will finger it plane increasingly fairy tale like when you are there. The ItAlian SmoOthie Blog June 23, 2017 | Reply There are such a many tomfool places in this world and so less time to visit it! I love your pictures! Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply I agree. Just too many places to visit. Thanks for stopping by Karie June 23, 2017 | Reply The Dawki river is unquestionably on my travel skillet list. I have heard so much well-nigh it, but I’m glad I got a preview of it here. It looks like an veritably magical place. Hope to visit soon! Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thanks Karie. Hoping that the pictures have made it climb higher on your list. nisha June 23, 2017 | Reply Your photos are stunning. The lake is so beautiful. I could sit and watch for hours doing nothing. I moreover loved the colored boats it provides the right value of contrast. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thanks Nisha. I wish that sometime in life if I overly go again, I get to see the well-spoken water here. Marjorie Gavan June 24, 2017 | Reply I looked at that first photo and it reminded me a lot of the limestone formations in a province that I just visited recently in my country, Qurino. It’s fascinating to see a similar view in flipside country.Planethe pebbled riverbank is the same! This is so uncanny haha… River Dawki looks amazing. I want to go there. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Intersting Marjorie. I shall squint up the reference. Thanks for sharing it. Enrico & Zuzana June 24, 2017 | Reply Wow! It really looks like a magical place! Loved your photos. Which camera did you use? Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thank you. Most of the pics here are with my Canon 1100D. Cheers siddharthandshruti June 24, 2017 | Reply Meghalaya is on our skillet list! Sindbad’s island looks beautiful! Can’t believe the colours! Love your photography. Ami June 25, 2017 | Reply Thank you . The place is magical indeed. neha June 25, 2017 | Reply The river is veritably beautiful. And so are the pebbles. I will definitely go here when I visit Meghalaya.Unquestionablyplanning to go there soon. Your pictures are stunning Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Neha. It sure is a lovely isle. AllGudThings June 25, 2017 | Reply OMG! It is unquestionably a fairyland so beautiful, wipe and amazing. I should say i was so much lost in your post and pictures, that I forgot this is not in real and I am just seeing it through your post.Wondrouspictures Ami. I surely need to visit living root underpass as well as Dawki River in Meghalaya. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you. I am not surprised your finger that way. I had to rub my vision too. Bhushavali June 25, 2017 | Reply OMG! That’s definitely fairy land!!! The landscape is so unbelievable and surreal! The pebble-y land is just awesome. I’d love to walk barefoot on that! The well-ventilated shot of those colorful wend is just awesome! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Bhushavali. You are definitely going to love it when you get there. Emily June 26, 2017 | Reply Gorgeous river, I didn’t know places like this existed in India! It looks so wipe and the colour is so pretty! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply There are a lot of such subconscious gems in India. You should definitely explore. tnmitch@gmail.com June 26, 2017 | Reply You photography and unravelment painted a trappy picture of this wondrous location!Unconfineddetail for me to leverage when planning a trip here! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you so much. I do hope you plan a trip there soon. Sandy N Vyjay June 26, 2017 | Reply What a lovely trip. The Dawki river looks so ethereal as it shimmers in its emerald hues. I can see that the journey itself was as enchanting as the destination as you traveled wideness pristine landscapes. The ‘Sindbad Island”, looks really intriguing and the ‘small’ pebbles really squint like eggs. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Glad you could moreover see the resemblance to the fairytale. It sure is a lovely place. Thanks for stopping by lovelaughcaribbean June 26, 2017 | Reply Your pictures are seriously stunning. I have never heard of this place and now I want to go tomorrow!! I’m not sure what I loved more, the emerald water, the waterfalls or the pebble beach! Thank you for sharing this wonderful place with us!! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Neither do I know what I loved the most. I think in general, this place overjoyed me. Thanks for stopping by. Aldrick Agpaoa June 26, 2017 | Reply Wow! This place is similar to Quirino Province’s “Governor’s Rapids” here in the Philippines. I am just in awe of the waddle formations and the unrelatedness of the land from the water. There’s too many similarities between India and the Philippines, eh? Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply I think so too. I had a similar observation on the two countries. Glad I was not the only one thinking that. Thanks for stopping by Aldrick. Chris Chu June 26, 2017 | Reply Wow, what unbelievable scenery.Unconfinedshots, I would love to visit Sindbad Island one day. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Chris. I hope you get to it soon. enidhi June 26, 2017 | Reply Super pics. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thanks Shrinidhi Travellersfoodboxx June 26, 2017 | Reply Holy. I just wanna thank you for this post. I never thought there was something like in our country, i guess there are a lot of things unsearched! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Yes, a lot of places are unexplored. Am glad to have stumbled on this one. Cheers Cai Dominguez June 27, 2017 | Reply This is a very helpful post since one day I’m planning to do India to Bangladesh land crossing. This place is a very trappy to do navigate boarding. Do you have ideas if foreigners can navigate the boarder going to Bangladesh from this point? Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply I do know there is trade between Tamabil and Dawki that happens here but am not sure of the other aspects. Thanks for stopping by, thatguywithstories June 27, 2017 | Reply How do you pronounce Dawki? Is it Da-va-kee? How do we reach this place? Which is the nearest railhead?Kindly update all of us with all these pieces of information. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply I think you just missed the Getting here section 🙂 All answers within. Thanks for stopping by Swayam Rahul June 27, 2017 | Reply Such a refreshing post and brought by a current of nostalgia of my visit to Dawki long back! Of undertow your pictures bring out the eyeful in a increasingly subtle manner withal with the written words. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Rahul. Glad you liked the post. Chris June 27, 2017 | Reply What a trappy place. I kind of hope it never becomes too popular and gets spoiled!! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Fingers crossed for the same. Also, I hope that the travelers are responsible unbearable to leave it as is. Thanks Chris Shane Prather June 27, 2017 | Reply The waters squint so serene! Floating among the calm, emerald waters is my idea of a relaxing getaway. I’m sure the photos don’t do Umngot River justice enough! Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Shane. I stipulate with you. The real thing is plane increasingly beautiful. Kat | Memoirs of a Globetrotter June 28, 2017 | Reply Wow, I didn’t know well-nigh this place before! It looks stunning! I would love to take a wend ride there. The waterfall looks lovely too. Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply Thank you Kat. This is a gorgeous place and magical indeed! Hope you get to visit it sometime 100cobbledroads June 28, 2017 | Reply What lovely captures of Dawki! It is truly a fairyland and the simile of Sindbad is so cute. The suburbanite had warned us that due to recent rains, the river may not be as clean, so we went with very low expectations. Luckily, it turned out to increasingly perfect than perfect 🙂 Ami June 28, 2017 | Reply I agree, I tried to alimony my expectations low too but it was just so enchanting. Glad we share the love. Paula - Gone with the Wine June 29, 2017 | Reply What a stunning place, I love the colour of the water! It moreover looks like you are in a middle of the nature with no disturbance which is lovely! I would love to visit someday if I get a chance. Ami June 29, 2017 | Reply It is a tranquil paradise…and yes, if you overly get a chance, you must see it! Thanks Paula Vaisakhi Mishra July 1, 2017 | Reply Oh Dawki! Just like you said it is the closest one can finger to a fairyland. It is so trappy and you have captured it perfectly 🙂 Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply Thank you Vaisakhi. Glad that you stipulate too! 🙂 Sara Broers July 1, 2017 | Reply This looks to be a magical wits that literally walked out of a fairytale. I’m a sucker for water falls and color, which guaranteed your post drew me right in. Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply Thank you Sara. You are unseat to love Meghalaya given that you love waterfalls. There are just tons of them. Sam Sparrow July 1, 2017 | Reply That rive really is beautiful! I’m a sucker for nature and the river and the waterfall is just up my street – you are right. Dawki is a true fairyland! Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply Thank you Sam. Am pretty sure that since you love nature, you will fall in love with Dawki. youngbrokeandwandering July 2, 2017 | Reply Wow the photos are amazing! The river was veritably stunning and the waterfall is so insane!! It really is just like a fairyland. Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply Thank you so much. Happy that you moreover found this place nice. Eve Kay July 2, 2017 | Reply The Emerald river looks amazing! India seems to have so many trappy landscapes that we should all explore. I would moreover love to see the India-Bangladesh border. Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply There is just so much to see here.Planeas a resident, I find it difficult to capture it all. Thanks for stopping by Eve. Gokul July 4, 2017 | Reply Can’t get over those untried waters. The surroundings match with those colors giving a Serene and peaceful atmosphere. Ami July 4, 2017 | Reply Pretty sure that you will fall in love with Dawki as I did. Hope you get there soon! Coolpams November 19, 2017 | ReplyTrappypost Ami 🙂 Ami November 20, 2017 | Reply Thank you Pamela Ryan Biddulph March 19, 2018 | Reply Hi Ami, What a unconfined picture of you guys. This place looks a fairy tale for sure. I think that untried shade of water makes it plane increasingly appealing, knowing how pristine the place is. Ryan Ami March 19, 2018 | Reply And to think that it becomes transparent when it does not rain. The glass water makes the wend squint as if it floats on air. Totally magical. Thanks Ryan for stopping by Cat June 6, 2018 | Reply Ami, I love your pics of Umngot River! The colour is so trappy and unreal! It must have been quite an wits to trip withal the river. Ami June 6, 2018 | Reply It was a total fairy-tale like experience. It made me immensely proud to know that this is a part of my country and am glad that I found such a lovely gem. You should plan to get here. Asking Minds July 4, 2018 | Reply This blog is so beautifully written. I am glad that I read your content. I have moreover followed you on Pinterest. Hope to read increasingly such in Future. 🙂 Ami July 6, 2018 | Reply Thank you. That is so flattering and motivating too. Hope to see you increasingly often on my posts. Leave a Reply Cancel reply Your email write will not be published. Required fields are marked *Comment Name * Email * Website Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. By using this form you stipulate with the storage and handling of your data by this website. * This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your scuttlebutt data is processed. Search for:Well-nighme - Am a restless wittiness of energy, born with a travel bug. 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