As a place, Varkala does not offer tourists any more than what many
other places in India can offer. However, it is to Varkala that the
tourists throng and not to other. To understand why, could be an entire
research project in itself, like why certain regions attract industries
and not others.
View of the morning sea with lone tourist performing yoga
In addition to being touristy, Varkala is also popular religious place
for many locals and perhaps for many Keralites as well. Two centres
that attract pilgrims are Janardhana Swamy temple and Sivagiri Mutt.
Janardhana Swamy temple is on the way to the Papanasam beach, a
pleasant sandy beach sandwiched between two cliffs. If one turns right
just before the temple, the road winds past the Taj hotel to the north
cliff. The road to the left leads to the South Cliff. Although there
are some places to stay on the south cliff, it is the north cliff that
attracts all attention.
Tank Temple
North cliff from the beach
A long winding path along the edge of the north cliff has all the
ingredients that make a tourist haven: knick-knack shops selling ware
from lands as far as Rajasthan, Kashmir and Tibet; restaurants with
displays of fresh fish on ice that dole out non-fish dishes as well and
an occasional shack that serves only veg food; places to stay with
varying degrees of comfort.
on a fish hunt...
Cliff frontage at night
The main tourist zone is sandwiched between the path along the cliff
and the road that leads to the north cliff from the Janardhana Swamy
temple. While most tourist eat in the shacks on the cliffs watching the
sea below, many stay in hotels, resorts and homes behind the cliff
frontage.
It heart-warming to see small houses (some of the inhabitants still
cooking on wood-stoves in the backyard) have managed to transform a
room or two into a space that can be rented out to tourists. Tourism
industry has given them an opportunity to earn some money. The little
lanes that dot this cliff are all clean without any rubbish. Tourists
can be seen enjoying the sunshine filtered through palm fronds while
sitting on little tables with checked table cloth in many back yards
(with the days wash still on the lines). Kerala seem to be encouraging
such home-stays, which is good both for the tourist as well as the
host. I would any day suggest tourists to stay at such places than at
sterile resorts that the rich prefer or rodent infested cheap hotels
that the back packers prefer.
Our task, the few days that we spend in Varkala before the group
arrived, was to find out places to visit and restaurants to eat in. It
was when the group was here I realise why hotel folk kow-tow to tour
operators: the group follows what the leader says to the last
dot! While Janardhana Swamy temple was a definite place to visit,
we though Sivagiri mutt, though a very nice place, would not have
interested these tourists. So we went on an auto ride to Anjengo, an
old English Fort about 20 km away to see if it would be of interest.
Anjengo (or five coconut trees) was for a while the second most
important trading port for the English after Bombay in the late 17th
century. This fort is said to have been built in 1695. Actually before
I found this information on the net, RJ told me that this was a Dutch
port. Somewhere else it was also written that Portuguese were also
here. So instead of trying to waste time arguing who owned it first and
how it changed hands, we decided to visit it. We also found out that a
place called the Golden Island just off the road to Anjengo that may
be of interest as well.
The route to the fort was extremely picturesque with the sea on the
right and coconut trees everywhere. The way the swaying coconut trees
framed the sea and the waves, it was almost a different picture frame
ever few meter. Another interesting feature along the route was the
number of mosques. This 20 km strip had over 10 mosques with few very
large as well. I am not sure if the local population can fill even one
of these large mosques completely. Doesnt say much about the
camaraderie these fishermen villages share with one and another.
Anjengo, perhaps due to the European influence has some missionary
school and few churches. The village by itself was nothing spectacular.
We realised that the main gate of the fort was locked with worker
repairing the wall inside. The guard has just gone out for a cup of
tea, we were told. A light-house that was close-by could have kept our
occupied until the guards return but the visitors were welcomed only
in the early evening. As we turned to walk back to the fort, we saw
someone waving frantically: it was the guard.
The fort in itself was just the walls. The main structure has collapsed
many years ago. The ASI is now trying to repair the walls (with nice
cement plaster as well) so that this skeleton remains. The walls are so
thick that one can easily walk over them and perhaps it was meant so as
there were steps everywhere that lead to the top of the walls. Neither
the fort in itself nor the views of the sea/village from the fort walls
was interesting enough for the group to be here. So we went to see the
Golden Island.
This island was not easily accessible. One would have to take some
narrow paths that finally lead to the backwaters. The island was just a
hop away on a dug-out canoe. The place was straight out of a picture
post card from the tropics: it was filled with coconut trees that
brought resplendent emerald green hue to the entire landscape.
Right on the banks was a coir unit with women beating out the coir from
the shells that have been soaked for 3 months.
Years ago, I worked with a group of women in a small village near
Visakhapatnam to set up a small coir yarn making unit. Although they
received good training thanks to a motivated trainer from the
government, we could compete neither in quality nor in price against
the golden yellow 2-ply coir yarn that came from Kerala. After seeing
unit here making coir and another unit making yarn a little later, I
have realised how could we have even thought of setting up a coir unit
in Vizag of all places? While I was pacifying myself that history was
full of such faux pas, RJ was taking snaps of people coming back from
the Island after visiting the two temples there. There is nothing else
on the island other than these two temples, which we forgot to mention
to the group. They learnt the hard way (some of them wanted to have
lunch there) that glorious sounding names mean nothing.
Some more pictures
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