Saturday, 18 February 2023

Kanyakumari and Kovalam, Coastal Malabar Road Trip - 2

 Day 2:

We were supposed to get up early before dawn and reach Kanyakumari to see the sunrise. However because of fog in the morning we had to shed the idea. So we slept for an extra couple of hours and after having tea and breakfast in the room, we headed for Kanyakumari once again. Our idea was to go near the Triveni Sangam area where Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean and Arabian Sea meet and get a good view of Vivekananda Rock Memorial and Thiruuvalluvar Statue.

Again after paying some municipal taxes for private car, we entered the car parking area. And OMG! there was no space to park car at 8 am in the morning. Because of some auspicious day, the whole area was flooded with thousands of devotees. So we had to give up the idea and look for some distant place from where we could see the memorial and the statue. So we went to a place near the sunset view point which was 1 km away from Triveni Sangam and from there saw distant view of both the memorial and the statue. Thiruuvalluvar Statue was undergoing some maintenance work. 

Tamil poet Thiruuvalluvar's statue

The best thing we got to see was the sea. Unobstructed views of the endless coastline, the white waves, the turquoise green sea and the clear blue sky...it is a sight that will stay in my memory forever.

Kanyakumari

Check the vlog here. Your view and likes count the most to us :)



We then visited Kovalam beach of Tamil Nadu ( Namesake of Kovalam beach in Kerala ) which we visited the previous day evening. It is just next to Sunset view point. After moving away due to the pilgrim rush at Kanyakumari beach, it was so hard to believe that there was not a single person on this beach apart from us. It was so calm and peaceful.We were over the moon when Ankur spotted plenty of sea urchins, colourful fishes, crabs and even an eel hiding under the rocks.


Next we went to Vattakkottai Fort which is some 7 km from Kanyakumari. Vattakkottai Fort is a circular fort built by the rulers of Travancore in 18th century and from the fort one can get amazing view of the ocean. Again 25 bucks municipal tax and we were allowed to enter the car park. The entry fee of the fort is an additional INR 25.

    Vattakkottai Fort

About 300 meters, before entering the fort there is a road on the left that points to the Vattakkottai Fort beach. We took a 15 minutes break there. A part of the sea has entered one side of the rock and has formed a natural swimming pool where mostly children were having a good splashing time. Just across the pool and on the right side one can see the sea and the fort.

    Vattakkottai Fort and beach

Our hotel checkout time at Udupi International was 12 noon. We were running late and informed the hotel reception that we will be 30 minutes late for check out. After checkout we headed for our next destination which was Kovalam ( in Kerala ).

It takes around 2 hours to reach Kovalam from Nagercoil. From the time we visited Kerala for the first time, till now the roads have improved drastically. And another great thing in Kerala is that toll tax booths are very less.

Coconut of Nagercoil and its adjoining areas is famous and it was evident from the ample number of stalls on either side of the highway selling coconut water.The coconuts are orangish in colour and all the shops are run by women.Along with coconut almost all the shops sell coconut embryo as well. It is sold as a sprouted coconut which on breaking, the inside spongy coconut embryo can be collected and eaten.It is somewhat fluffy and tastes sweet and salty.
    Coconut embryo

It was evening we reached Kovalam. We had booked Pebble Coast Beach Resort which had 4.3 stars rating on Google. But trust me it was the most worst hotel of our entire trip. First we had to wait for 15 minutes for someone to talk to us since the hotel has nothing called reception. They have two buildings and a single boy who runs errands for both the buildings.They have two buildings - one old and one new. We were told that the old one has rooms only on ground floor. We checked and saw that the rooms were shabby, damp and wet with no sunlight or proper ventilation.So we choose the new building. Now the new building has no parking space so guests have to park the car in the old building and walk uphill to the new building with all their luggage. The new building has no lifts and the staircase passage is also very narrow.

The rooms are sold as sea view, but in reality you cannot see the sea from your room. If you come out to the common balcony and lift your chin up, then very far away you can see a thin slice of the sea at the horizon area. You will not see the shoreline or the beach, only a tiny bit of the horizon that too very faint. However you will see a huge big, dirty scrap yard, just on the adjacent plot next to the hotel, which looks equally frightening just as you come to the balcony.

They have no restaurant or room service so either guests have to eat outside or use Swiggy.Again there is never anyone at the hotel gate to monitor the entry or exit of people.Anyone can walk in or walk out anytime and security is in highly compromised state. The remaining part of the day was wasted as we were so frustrated with this hotel. Even to take out the car, we have to walk to the old building then if there are cars parked behind our's we have to look for the sole caretaker and ask him to look for the guest whose car needs to be moved.Similarly we had to run thrice that day to move our car because some guests wanted to go out.The road in front of the hotel is downhill and narrow and so parking on the road is not an option.

Day 3:

This is not all.The next day morning we were terrified to find the sweeper was completely drunk and out of his senses and was loitering on the corridor.That was it. We decided to leave the hotel at that very instant even though our booking was done for 2 days with full payment. We got no refunds from the hotel and also we discovered that the hotel was selling as if its located on Kovalam although it is located on some other beach but not Kovalam.And the closest beach from this hotel does not even have a proper walking route. Do check our video for the route. Elders or children will not be able to walk on this road.If you are wondering why I am ranting so much, its because we want to tell you about all the negatives which were never written on google reviews and we do not want any of our readers to suffer like we did.

We got a last minute booking at another hotel called Golden Sands beach resort.This was a decent hotel with a good restaurant, pool, children's play area and very close to Kovalam beach. You have to walk just 200 meters on a proper paved alley which will directly take you close to the lighthouse on Kovalam's lighthouse beach.

    View from room @Golden Sands beach resort

The evening and night was spend on the beach. Kovalam is the most coolest beach in Kerala. Its a safe beach, no scammers no touted vendors.You will find a nice trendy crowd, a swanky beach vibe, upscale beach shacks, souvenir shops. A good number of restaurants have display counters on the outside topped up with fresh catch of the day. We had super jumbo prawns at INR 1600 a kilo.Anyday that same size prawn could cost more than INR 3500/ kilo in Bangalore. Cooking charges are free and you can have it prepared in several styles with your own customisation and take it home or enjoy sitting in the shack and seeing the sea.

Do read our blog on Kovalam, when we first visited almost 10 years back.

Day 4:

The day was Christmas. Our plan for today was to leave Kovalam and head to Trivandrum.But before that we went to see Kovalam beach for one more time. Walking some 150 metres walking on cobbled narrow alleys from our hotel, we reached Light house beach. An equal mix of Indian and foreigner crowd, everyone seems to be enjoying the water on a bright sunny Christmas morning at 9:00 am.There were rows of sun bathing beds laid on the beach each with a colourful umbrella on top and most were filled, interesting by desi tourists.Most foreign tourists were engaged in water sports or water activities.
    On the way to lighthouse beach

Ankur took some drone footages while I took some b-roll footages. A seller carrying mini elephant statues carved on wood approached me to know from where we have come.He was more eager to know about drone footages than pushing to sell his stuff.
    Lighthouse at the back

    Bed with a view




    Kovalam Beach

Kovalam to Trivandrum distance is very less, its about 20kms and it took us around 45 minutes to check in to our new homestay.We last came to Trivandrum 10 years back.Now the city has changed drastically beyond recognition. Roads have widened, there are flyovers to beat the traffic congestion.Swanky IT hubs, tall residential towers, the landmark Lulu Mall all have lined up on either side of the main road.Just take any lane and you will get to see big houses on huge plot areas, boutique hotels and restaurants, Montessori  schools, supermarkets and lots of big trees. The city definitely looks posh but interestingly its very affordable and cheap.

We went out in the afternoon after a short rest to get some of the city vibe.Our plan was to drive down to Shangumugham beach so that our kids can get down and play on the beach for some time.We avoided the main road and took the beach road to avoid the city traffic.Huge banners of Ronaldo were put up on trees, grounds making it clear that Malayalees love football and were backing Portugal in WC.The houses that were lined on the left side of the road have one side facing the sea and each house was competing with the other in terms of grandeur and land size. To poor souls like us who live in Bangalore apartments, it felt like we were passing through Lutyens zone.Not sure if those are ancestral land on which their owners have built such classy houses or bought from Gulf money or new age cash loaded entrepreneurs but definitely these people have some part of their lives surely sorted!

We saw the very beautiful Vettukadu Church, although we did not get down.The church and its open area was beautifully decorated for Christmas.A bunch of young mostly high school going group of boys were dancing frantically to some Malayalee filmi song on the road.Its how local community also owns a festival in their own way, Christmas being no exception.

Our beach fun was cut short by sudden downpour and thunder.Since it was dark we took another road which google suggested.A part of it was the main road and part was some other road that we have not travelled while going to the beach.Kerala has a high population of Christians and this is when we saw the city had poured out on the road to enjoy Christmas. People in groups getting into churches covered every feet with lights.Almost every church had a community fair going on.And the most amazing thing was that many of the Churches made big Bethlehem theme setup outside the church building depicting the birth of baby Jesus.

The next day we will leave Trivandrum and head for Kerala's most famous beach Varkala.We discovered another outstanding beach that can beat Varkala any day. Before that a short visit to Padmanabhaswamy temple while leaving Trivandrum.But all these stories for the upcoming blog.

No comments:

Post a Comment