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Hotel Coconut Lagoon
Kerala's famous backwaters comprise of vast lakes and a
system of narrow canals and waterways linking them to one
another. Not so long ago, these waterways served as the
backbone of Kerala's transportation. And Kumarakom is the
ideal place to experience the backwaters. Coconut Lagoon has
rightly carved its place among the top 10 heritage resorts
of the world. The resort is on a small island and can be
reached only by boat. The accommodation consists of
individual cottages built in the traditional Kerala style,
relying heavily on wood and some with private pools. The
bathrooms are open to the sky and the restaurant specializes
in Kerala cuisine peculiar to the region. Activities here
are just lazing in the swimming pool with Jacuzzi, walks in
the nearby coconut groves or paddy fields, sunset cruises
etc.
Muted
as the dawn itself, the alarm cry of a solitary pond heron
breaks the early morning stillness as a dugout canoe,
paddled by two fishermen, glides across the water at a
determined but unhurried pace. The scene is idyllic, the
mood dreamlike. Kerala’s back country waterways seem far
removed from the universe most of us inhabit, yet they are
linked to the rest of the world in a very real way, and have
been for at least two millennia. In earlier times, if less
so today, these very waterways were the staring point for
the transport of South Indian spices, which eventually found
their way to the distant shores of Europe and beyond. Formed
by the 40- odd rivers that flow down to the Arabian Sea form
the Cardamom Hills in the Western Ghats, this network of
rivers, canals, lakes and estuaries compromises one of
India’s most beautiful areas a rural, river in expanse of
verdant coconut groves and rice paddies. In Malayalam, the
language of Kerala, the backwaters are known as Kuttanad,
"the land of the short people," a reference, perhaps, to the
face that the farmers seen working here are often knee-deep
in paddy fields,
For centuries the backwaters have provided a safe and
efficient means of transportation for goods and people
moving between the interior and the port towns along the
coast, Even today, coconuts, pepper, coir, rice, and other
such products of the region are carried along these
waterways in traditional boats called Kettuvallam (stitched
canoes), and village children are ferried off to school in
all sorts of country craft.
Location:
10 Kms from Kottayam, 78
Kms from Cochin. Direct ferry from Casino Hotel, Cochin,
also travel half - way by road and take the ferry from
Tanneermukkam jetty or Kumarakom.
The Restaurant:
Cited in Arundhati Roy’s Booker Prize –
winning best-seller, "the God of Small thing," the
restaurant at Coconut Lagoon is renewed as much for its
superb Kerala cuisine (vegetarian and no vegetarian alike)
as for its authentic setting, and is housed in one of the
resort’s
most impressive Tharavadu. Known as Ettukettu, the building
incorporates two atriun-like courtyards under an expansive
tile roof supported by dozens o slim columns, a design that
enables the space within to benefit from the slightest
breeze. The restaurant is the oldest Structure at Coconut
Lagoon, and it, too, formerly belonged to a prominent
Malayalee Family living in a nearby village. Cuisine: Ethnic
and international (buffet).
The
Accommodation:
14 Heritage Mansions, 28
Heritage Bungalows. Though some of the cottages are of more
recent vintage, many are well over a century old and a few
actually date back to the early 1700s. The resort can only
be reached by boat and its accommodation consists of
individual cottages called Tharavadu, t he
traditional wooden house of Kerala. Coconut Lagoon's
cottages feature ultramodern bathrooms, each located in an
inner courtyard boasting its own banana tree. Through all
the cottages vary in configuration, and some of the
air-conditioned units are newly built replicas in
corporation only fragments of old Tharavadu that could not
be saved in their entirety, Coconut Lagoon offers two basic
types of accommodation: Heritage Mansion and Heritage
Bungalows. The former has two stories, the upstairs bedroom
gallery offering particularly magnificent views of Lake
Vembanad. The latter are more compact, single – level
cottages. Both are furnished in Aiyny and Jack Woods, and
retain all the charm of original family homes, with thick,
solid doors, intricate window carvings, and terra cotta tile
floors. Structurally necessary alterations have been carried
out with consummate discretion, i.e., in keeping with the
style and décor of the era, and great attention has been
paid to very detail. The lamp stands in each Tharavadu, for
example, having been carved from old wooden hinges.
Traditionally, of course, Keralites bathed in the rivers –
in rural areas many people still do – but Coconut Lagoon’s
cottages feature ultramodern bathrooms, each located in an
inner courtyard boasting its own banana (or coconut) tree,
so you can shower al fresco under a starlit sky in complete
and utter privacy.
Recreation : The Cashew
Shaped pool, slightly elevated to give a commanding view is
popular including the honeymoon couples who swim there in
the early evening to the sounds of Indian classical music
drifting across from the Garden Café. For those who prefer
not to venture beyond the bounds of the resort itself, there
are plenty of things to do. Simple bamboo fishing poles are
available, too, and though the restaurant offers many fine
seafood dishes on its ever-varied lunch and dinner menus,
the chef nonetheless promises to cook any fish an angler
catches from the lagoon. Be warned, however, that no prizes
are given for catching a monster from the fish farm within
the confines of the hotel, though no punishment is meted out
for doing so, either. |