
There is a particular kind of madness that grips the traveller the moment the sky turns that bruised, pewter grey and the first fat drops begin to fall on parched earth. In Maharashtra, this madness has a name, and six very good addresses. By June, the Western Ghats are already pulling clouds off the Arabian Sea, the rivers swell, the waterfalls throw themselves off cliffs with reckless abandon, and the hills go so green they almost hurt to look at.
Jawhar
Maharashtra has its own Darjeeling, and almost nobody knows about it. Jawhar, a former princely state tucked into the forested hills of Palghar district, wears its obscurity well. The Dabhosa waterfall, one of the highest in the state at over 500 feet, is the centrepiece, but the real reason to come in June is the quality of silence here. The Warli tribe has lived in these hills for centuries, and their geometric art, white figures on mud walls, appears on homes throughout the village.

Chikhaldara
The only coffee-growing hill station in Maharashtra sits at 1,118 metres in the Satpura range, so far from the Western Ghats crowd that it operates in its own atmospheric timezone. With the coffee plantations glistening, Chikhaldara in June is almost comically green. The Melghat Tiger Reserve on its doorstep breathes mist into the valleys each morning, and the Bhimkund waterfall crashes through the forest with the kind of force that makes conversation impossible.

Matheran
India’s only automobile-free hill station gets considerably more itself in June when the narrow-gauge toy train climbs through cloud-hung forest, and the red-mud paths are empty of summer crowds. The famous viewpoints such as Echo Point, Panorama Point, and Monkey Point are frequently obscured by mist, which is, paradoxically, their best version. You hear the valley before you see it. The whole place exists at a pace that the monsoon enforces, and the soul quietly thanks.
Koyna Nagar
Long before travellers discovered the vocabulary of slow tourism, Koyna Nagar was already practising it. Built around the vast Shiv Sagar Lake, formed by the Koyna Dam, this small lake town in Satara district sits within an eco-sensitive zone where development has been, by necessity and by choice, kept to a minimum. In June, the forests thicken visibly by the day, and the boat ride across Shiv Sagar to reach the trailhead for Vasota Fort is one of those journeys that renders the destination almost secondary.

Malshej Ghat
The Konkan railway may be Maharashtra’s monsoon icon, but Malshej Ghat is its unsung poem. The plateau waterfalls cascade across the ghats in sheets, flamingos occasionally shelter in the water bodies near Pimpalgaon Joga Dam, and the entire landscape operates under a near-constant veil of cloud. The fort of Harishchandragad nearby draws the serious trekker, while the ghats themselves satisfy anyone who simply wants to stand in the rain and feel unreasonably glad to be alive.

Amboli
Amboli sits at the southern edge of Maharashtra’s Konkan coast, a hill station so lush and so consistently overlooked that its waterfalls and viewpoints feel like genuine discoveries even in the age of Instagram. The Amboli Ghat receives some of the heaviest rainfall in the Sahyadris, and the forest here, home to the rare Amboli bush frog, is the real headline. June is when the mist settles lowest, the waterfalls run highest, and the frogs sing loudest. It is, quietly, one of Maharashtra’s finest monsoon secrets.
Maharashtra in June asks only one thing of you: that you show up willing to be rained on, delayed, rerouted, and occasionally stranded at a dhaba with a glass of tea and nowhere particular to be. That, as it turns out, is not a bad way to travel. It may, in fact, be the only way that counts.
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