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Kerala Backwaters
The __900 km network__ of canals, lakes and rivers in Kerala — around Alleppey (Alappuzha) and Kumarakom on Vembanad Lake (96 km², India's largest), explored on __traditional kettuvallam houseboat__ (rice-boats converted to tourism) for 1 to 3 unforgettable nights, private chef included and canal-side villages.
The Kerala Backwaters (Backwaters of Kerala, or simply 'backwaters') form an exceptional network of 900 km of canals, lakes, rivers and lagoons stretching along Kerala's Malabar Coast in south-western India. At the heart of this aquatic labyrinth lies Vembanad Lake (96 km², 14 km long, India's largest lake, Ramsar-listed for biodiversity), around which the two main tourist bases are organised: Alleppey (officially Alappuzha, 175,000 inhabitants, nicknamed 'Venice of the East' by Indian Viceroy Lord Curzon in 1900) on west bank, and Kumarakom (high-end residential village of 25,000 inhabitants) on east bank.
The iconic experience is the kettuvallam cruise (literally 'tied boat' in Malayalam) — ancient traditional cargo boats in jackfruit and teak wood, 20-25 m long, hull assembled by hand with coconut fibre ropes (without any metal nail), covered with woven palm leaf roof. Used for centuries to transport rice from Kuttanad rice fields (the world's only rice fields cultivated below sea level, -1 to -3 m) to Alleppey ports, they were progressively converted in the 1990s into boat-hotels with air-conditioned rooms, private bathrooms, open decks and private chef on board. Today, over 1,500 kettuvallam navigate the backwaters (strict regulation, mandatory eco-labels since 2015) — Asia's largest fleet.
A typical kettuvallam cruise (1 to 3 nights, €100-300/night for a couple in private 1-bedroom boat, meals included) follows this schedule: 12-1pm boarding at Alleppey or Kumarakom (briefing, cabin settling), lunch on board while navigating main canals (Kerala-style fish, local vegetables, dessert), afternoon navigation in rice fields and villages, riverside stops to discover crafts (coir rope making, palm leaf weaving), 5-6pm arrival in a calm canal for night (mandatory mooring at sunset, ecological to limit traffic), dinner on deck at sunset (grilled fish, prawn curry, lentils, rice), relax evening with reading or star-gazing, night in air-conditioned cabin. Waking to birdsong, breakfast on deck, morning navigation until 9-10am disembarkation.
The canal-side villages you cross offer a rare glimpse of Keralan rural life — wooden houses on stilts, Catholic churches (Kerala is India's most Christian state, 18% population, heritage of Apostle Thomas who reportedly landed at Cranganore in 52 AD), Hindu temples and mosques (centuries-old harmonious coexistence), women in colourful saris washing laundry in canals, fishermen casting round nets from pirogues, swimming children waving at tourists, mobile vendors in canoes offering fresh coconuts and bananas. The Kuttanad rice fields bordering the backwaters are world-unique — cultivated below sea level thanks to a century-old dyke network inspired by Dutch polders.
Bird watching is exceptional at Kumarakom Bird Sanctuary (14 ha bordering Vembanad Lake, open 6am-6pm, 100 INR ≈ €1 entry for foreigners) — cormorants, herons, ospreys, kingfishers, parrots, and in winter (November-March) over 25 migratory species from Siberia and Central Asia. Ideal visit early morning (6-8am) or late afternoon (4-6pm) with local guide (€15-25 for 2h traditional boat walk).
The Snake Boat Races (Vallam Kali) are the region's major cultural event — long boat races with 100-120 rowers (chundan vallam, 30-40 metres long), stylised reconstruction of Travancore kingdom's medieval naval battles. Most prestigious is Nehru Trophy held annually 2nd Saturday of August on Punnamada Lake at Alleppey (instituted 1952 by Jawaharlal Nehru) — grand spectacle but in full monsoon. The Champakulam Moolam Boat Race (July, the oldest since 1545) is more authentic.
What we love
- ✅900 km of canals and Vembanad Lake (96 km², India's largest) to explore by houseboat
- ✅Kettuvallam houseboat with private chef: unique, intimate and ecological experience
- ✅Alleppey 'Venice of the East': Kuttanad rice fields below sea level, canal-side villages
- ✅Kumarakom Bird Sanctuary: 25+ winter migratory species, traditional boat walk
- ✅Snake Boat Races (August Nehru Trophy, July Champakulam): major cultural spectacle
What to know
- ❌June-August monsoon (660-700 mm/month) inadvisable for houseboat
- ❌Saturated main Alleppey canals in high season (kettuvallam traffic)
- ❌Medium-high budget houseboat (€100-300/night couple, all-inclusive)
- ❌Year-round mosquitoes (mosquito repellent essential)
- ❌Non-swimmable canal water (organic pollution, do not swim)
Situation
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How many nights on houseboat in the backwaters?+
Houseboat at Alleppey or Kumarakom?+
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Our verdict
The Kerala Backwaters are India's unique experience — 900 km of canals and lakes explored on traditional kettuvallam houseboat with private chef for 1 to 3 unforgettable nights. Our recommendation: plan 1-2 nights on houseboat (ideal 2 nights for full enjoyment) at the heart of a 7-10 day Kerala circuit combining Kochi (2 nights, Portuguese-Dutch colonial heritage), Alleppey/Kumarakom (2 nights backwaters houseboat) and Munnar (2-3 nights, altitude tea plantations). Choose a private 1-bedroom kettuvallam (€100-200/night couple, meals and chef included — Coconut Lagoon, Spice Coast Cruises, Lakes & Lagoons operators) or premium 2-3 bedroom boat (€200-400/night for family or group). Travel from November to February (dry season), ideally December-February (perfect climate, clear sky, limpid landscapes). Avoid June-August (intense monsoon, less pleasant houseboat). Don't miss Kumarakom Bird Sanctuary early morning, a traditional village stop (coir crafts, spice farm), a Keralan cooking class with your on-board chef, and if travelling in August: the Nehru Trophy Snake Boat Race (2nd Saturday, grand spectacle). Kochi (COK) flight from Mumbai or Delhi (1h45-3h), Kochi-Alleppey transfer 1h30.
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"Janvier : climat parfait, ciel dégagé, foule maximale, tarifs houseboat en hausse."
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