We traveled through Cochin where the architecture is very beautiful and everything is so well organized. That evening, we drove to the Neyyar Sanctuary for an overnight stay. In the morning we heard and saw a lot of the wildlife while on a river boat tour but we were not fortunate enough to see a tiger. Further on in our trip, our driver took us through beautiful tea gardens, stopping at roadside dabawalas (roadside eating joints) to have chai and coffee.
When we left Munnar, we drove to Kumarakom where we took the houseboat tour on the backwaters. We took a 6 hour trip and every moment was breathtaking. The moments watching the guide row a boat with a stick taller than him was amazing. Throughout the tour we stopped to experience different aspects of what makes the backwaters, the backwaters. Our first stop was on an island to see the value of the coconut. I knew that coconuts could be used for food, hair oil and cooking oil, but here I learned that coconuts can also be used for carpets, doormats and, the one thing that surprised me, the boat we were on was being held together by the string produced from dried coconut shells.
Being married to a Bengali, I have tasted various types of fish. We stopped for lunch on another island where we had fish on a banana leaf with different type of Dal (Lentils) and chutney. I particularly loved the coconut chutney and idly. After lunch we headed back through the beautiful backwaters to our driver who took us to the hotel for the night. In the morning we left early and headed to the southernmost tip of India, the town of Vavathurai to see Vivekananda Rock. It was amazing, inside the memorial, built in honor of Sri Swami Vivekananda, you felt peace and calmness inspiring concentration that clears your mind of life’s worries. The outside was extremely beautiful, especially where you see the merging of the Bay of Bengal, Arabian Sea and the Indian Ocean. The second amazing site was the Thiruvalluvar Statue. The inside had scripts of the great poet along the walls. I understand that it was built to welcome the 21st century. When I first saw it, I immediately thought of the Persian Empire and their conquest and ventures in the Arabian Sea between the Middle East and India.
As was in the past, India can never be conquered. No matter how many times you visit India, you will never be able to say that you saw the same thing twice; whereas if you toured Germany you know that Kölner Dom and Schloss Neuswanstein will always be open at the same time and that there is a certain route and tour. In India, the Taj Mahal, Gateway of India and other sites are also typical tourist spots, but the uniqueness lies in the direction you take as the tour each time is never quite the same. This is what makes India so special, a country one will always want to revisit.