From this viewpoint, guests are looking at the same sea that Shivaji Maharaj looked at and decided to own — at a time when no Indian ruler had seriously contested European control of the ocean. The fort is a lookout for a much larger story. Tell it fully here.
Maratha naval vision: Sindhudurg Fort — visible across the water — was commissioned by Shivaji Maharaj in 1664 as part of a larger maritime strategy. This coastline was critical for controlling trade routes, monitoring enemy movement, and building an indigenous naval force capable of challenging European powers. Forts like Nivti formed part of that wider coastal defence network.
Maratha warships: The Maratha navy used different types of vessels depending on purpose and coastline conditions. Large warships like the Gurab and Pal carried heavy cannons and were built for naval combat and coastal control. Smaller and faster vessels like the Galbat and Shibad were used for movement through creeks, coastal raids, troop transport, and rapid manoeuvring along the Konkan shoreline.
Hiroji Indulkar: The architect behind Sindhudurg Fort, Hiroji Indulkar, also designed Raigad Fort. A well-known story says that when Shivaji Maharaj asked what reward he wanted after Raigad was completed, Hiroji requested only a small stone tile carrying his name near the entrance of the Jagadeeshwar Temple — so that the king's footsteps would pass over it every day.
Shivaji's environmental thinking: The same vision that drove Sindhudurg was also ecological. Shivaji's royal decree — recorded in the Adnyapatra by his minister Ramchandrapant Amatya — explicitly orders his army not to cut Mango and Jackfruit trees on Swarajya lands, even for shipbuilding timber:
"The rayat has grown these trees like their own children. What pain it would be to fell them." He also issued a broader decree ordering the use of dry and dead wood as far as possible, cutting fresh trees only when absolutely necessary and only with the owner's consent. He was among the first rulers on this coast to think about timber as a long-term resource — planting along the coast to ensure future supply for the Maratha naval fleet. Forests and the sea were not separate concerns. They were the same strategy.
Kanhoji Angre and the Maratha Naval Fleet: The navy Shivaji built became, under Admiral Kanhoji Angre, the only indigenous force on the west coast to truly challenge European sea power. For nearly two centuries, the Portuguese had ruled these waters unchallenged. Kanhoji Angre, with roughly 80 ships — many of them koli fishing boats engineered for coastal warfare — defeated the British and Portuguese combined fleet twice. He died in 1729, undefeated and unrivalled. One man's vision — of a people who belonged to this sea — held against the greatest colonial navies of the era.
Vengurla Rocks: The rocky islands visible further out are the Vengurla Rocks — home to India's largest colony of Indian swiftlets, over 5,000 birds nesting in sea caves, building their nests entirely from saliva. These are the same nests used in bird's nest soup, one of the world's most expensive foods. What looks like bare, uninhabited rock from here has an entire cave ecosystem inside it.
For breakfast (morning sessions)
After the viewpoint, find a shaded spot nearby with a good view and serve breakfast here. Let guests sit with what they've just heard. The view does the rest of the talking.