Malanad-Malabar River Cruise to change Kerala’s tourism face from Feb 15

Malanad-Malabar River Cruise to change Kerala s tourism face from Feb 15

Thiruvananthapuram:

Kerala Tourism is launching the pioneering Malanad-Malabar River Cruise project next week, rolling the first of the 11 types of boat-rides that provide individual thematic experiences and attracts tourists to the state’s less-explored areas.

The inaugural cruise boat will enter the waters on February 15 as part of the innovative project that aims to brighten the waterways in the northern districts of Kannur and Kasaragod.

The first service will be on the route linking Parassinikkadavu and Pazhayangadi.

The project will also help showcase the Malabar region’s culture, rich with local legends and folk arts.

The endeavor envisages 48 boat terminals and jetties along seven rivers across the districts of Kannur and Kasaragod.

The work on two terminals is over.

Upholding the principles of Responsible Tourism, the project also ensures the participation of the local population.

”It guarantees a better livelihood to the people around.

They include the fisher folk, farmers, drivers of cabs and auto-rickshaws, handicraft workers and handloom labourers,” said Tourism Minister Kadakampally Surendran.

KTDC will run the boats, six of which are being manufactured, in the first phase, by the Kerala Shipping and inland Navigation Corporation.

The project is being implemented by the government Inland Navigation Department and state-owned KEL, with T Madhukumar as the architect.

Principal Secretary of Kerala Tourism, Rani George said the state-of-the-art boat terminals at Parassinikkadavu and Pazhayangadi in Kannur district have been completed at a cost of Rs 7.5 crore.

”Both the government and private parties would run the cruises,” she said.

”As for the rest of the project, 90 percent of the work on the terminals and jetties is complete.

The cruise project had, in September 2018, been sanctioned Rs 80.37 under the Swadesh Darshan scheme that promotes rural tourism circuits.” Kerala Tourism Director P Bala Kiran said the developmental work was fast progressing under the scheme.

”The Malanad-Malabar project will get world-class cruise packages once the Swadesh Darshan enters its second phase,” he said.

The cruise project is being carried out along the rivers of Mayyazhi, Valapattanam, Ancharakkandi, Kuppam, Perumba, Kavvayi, Thejaswini, and Chandragiri rivers besides the sprawling Valiyaparamaba backwaters.

Not limited to just trips down these waterways, the concept features cruises based on the varied themes of North Malabar culture.

For instance, the Mayyazhi river cruise will give the tourist an experience of Kalaripayattu martial art, while the Anjarakandy package will commemorate the anti-British Struggles of Pazhassi Raja and the region’s spices.

The other thematic cruises are on Malabari cuisine, Birds and Agriculture (along the Valapattanam river).

Besides, there is the Mangrove cruise (Kuppam), Musiccruise (Perumba), Handloom and Handicraft cruise (Kavvayi and Valiyaparamba), Water Sports and River Boating Cruise(Thejaswini), Model Responsible Village cruise (Valiyaparamba), and Yakshagana cruise (Chandragiri).

Overall, the plan is to bring Malabar out of its near obscurity.

It will effectively work as a tool for the economic development of places up the state, authorities said.