Kumudvathi River

Last updated

Kumudavathi River
Location
Country India
State Karnataka
District Bengaluru Rural
Physical characteristics
SourceKumbha Thirtha, Shivagange hills
  location Bengaluru Rural, Karnataka, India
  coordinates 13°10′11″N77°13′23″E / 13.169693°N 77.222919°E / 13.169693; 77.222919
Mouth Arkavathi River
  location
Thippagondanahalli, Bengaluru Rural, India
  coordinates
12°58′30″N77°20′05″E / 12.974991°N 77.334829°E / 12.974991; 77.334829
Length45 km (28 mi)approx.

The Kumudavathi river is a minor river that flows to the north west of the city of Bangalore. The river has largely dried up but there are ongoing efforts to rejuvenate it.

Contents

Course

The river originates at Kumbha Thirtha in Shivagange hills and flows for 45 km before its confluence with the Arkavathi river at Thippagondanahalli (T.G.Halli) reservoir. The river basin is spread across 460 Sq. km and the entire catchment area encompasses 278 villages. [1]

Drying Up and Revival Efforts

Although water flow in the river had been decreasing, it only got attention in 2007 when the Thippagondanahalli reservoir fed by Kumudvathi River went dry. In February 2013, a large team of volunteers from the Art of Living (AOL) [2] took up a project to rejuvenate the Kumudvathi river by using a scientific methodology. Over the course of the next years, the project built over 439 boulder checks, de-silted over 20 traditional stepwells, constructed 434 recharge wells and 71 water pools, built 45 recharge borewells, planted more than 425,000 saplings, besides spreading awareness to over 75,000 people residing in over 100 villages surrounding the river basin. [3] [4]

References

  1. "Kumudvathi is Gushing with Water Again". Archived from the original on 10 November 2021. Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  2. Standard, Business. "Project Water Security by The Art of Living". www.business-standard.com. Archived from the original on 3 October 2024. Retrieved 21 March 2025.{{cite web}}: |first= has generic name (help)
  3. "Kumudvathi, a river on the path to recovery" . Retrieved 25 June 2020.
  4. "River Rejuvenation: an Art of Living initiative to make India water positive". ANI News. Retrieved 21 March 2025.