Kerala
Tourism kick starts 2019 on an ambitious note.
The country’s
tourism trendsetter embraces the New Year with a potpourri of art and dance
forms.
With the
inauguration of the Kannur International airport, Kerala is the only state in
India to have four international airports. Flanked by the Arabian Sea and
shielded by the Western Ghats, Kannur is now gearing up to become a
favourite in tourist itineraries. Home to the piquant Moplah cuisine,
land of forts and folklores, the new airport hopes to establish Malabar, which
shares boundaries with Coorg, Coimbatore and Mysore, as the new
tourism gateway to South India.
“With the inauguration
of the Kannur International Airport, the world can now wake up to the wonders
of Malabar. Kerala Tourism will leverage upon established destinations in North
Kerala like Bekal and Wayanad, whilst giving thrust to lesser known micro
destinations in Kannur and Kasaragode districts, like “Valiyaparamba
Backwaters, Kuppam & Ranipuram,” said Shri.
Kadakampally Surendran, Hon’ble Minister
for Tourism, Kerala.
Art from around the world
With the onset
of the cultural fiestas like the Nishagandhi Dance Festival and the popular
Kochi Muziris Biennale, Kerala is all set to welcome art aficionados. The 5th
edition of the immensely popular Kochi Muziris Biennale is underway in Kochi. The state
endorses the dreamy lanes of Fort Kochi and a pilgrimage to this biennial which
has changed the landscape of contemporary Indian art today and has helped make
Kochi, the art capital of India. The Kochi Muziris Biennale will run till 29th
March, 2019.
“Kerala has always promised to be an enriching
experience for travellers, and art has been the crux of our tourism
initiatives. It is our mission to peg Kerala as a soul stirring travel
experience. We begin this year gracefully with a weeklong potpourri of dance
forms at the Nishagandhi Dance Festival, which just concluded last weekend in
the capital city, and have many other festivals planned for the rest of the
year including the Nishagandhi Monsoon Festival" said Smt. Rani George, IAS, Secretary (Tourism), Govt. of Kerala.
Medley of talents
The Nishagandhi Dance Festival
which is conducted every year in January, on the lush green premises of the
Kanakakkunnu Palace in the heart of Thiruvananthapuram is marked by different
genres of dance and is the best platform for art lovers to familiarise with the
best and upcoming talents in India and to enjoy magical evenings in the company
of Odissi, Kathak, Bharatanatyam, Manipuri, Mohiniyattam, Chhau and
Kuchipudi.
New products and experiences tailor-made
for the domestic traveller
Extending sustainability online
Earlier this
year Kerala tourism had bagged 4 of the nine coveted national tourism awards,
including the one for the Most Responsible Tourism Project/Initiative. The
pioneer of Responsible Tourism initiatives in the country, Kerala’s RT Mission
has rolled out many experiential packages that offers rustic travel escapades,
and life as lived by a local. In a first, RT initiatives have been expanded
online and a platform has been created where tourists can directly buy
agricultural produce, handicrafts, traditional artefacts etc and get access to
the contacts of skilled craftsmen and traditional artists.
World’s biggest bird
sculpture
Another example of
sustainable and eco-friendly tourism, the Jatayu Earth Centre was inaugurated
earlier in August and is spread across 65 acres. The giant statue of Jatayu is
200 feet long, 150 feet wide and 70 feet in height, making it the largest
functional bird sculpture in the world. The destination is easily
accessible as it is right at the epicentre of the south Kerala tourist spots.
India’s first Biodiversity
Museum
In the last few months,
the state has produced several environmentally engaging and eco-friendly
ventures to take pride in. India's
first biodiversity museum is tucked away on the outskirts of
Thiruvananthapuram. This museum, that was once a boathouse, is now home to the
state's first-ever Science on Sphere (SOS) system.
Voyage through historic ties
For history buffs
looking to transport themselves to another era, there is the Muziris
Heritage Project. The remains of a once thriving port frequented by Arabs,
Romans, Egyptians as early as the first century BC is today preserved across 25
museums as the largest heritage conservation project in India. Another offering
in the historical space is the Spice Route Project that
rekindled the 2000-year old ancient sea links and shared cultural and culinary
legacies with 30 countries.
2017 was a landmark year
for Kerala Tourism, in terms of both domestic and foreign footfalls. Domestic
arrivals increased to 1,46,73,520, translating into an 11.39% Year on year
growth while international arrivals during 2017 was 10,91,870 showing an
increase of 5.15% over the previous year’s figure .
Apart from repeatedly
being lauded by magazines like Conde Nast Traveller (Best Leisure Destination),
Nat Geo Traveller, Kerala recently bagged 4 Awards for the year 2016 – 17 at
the National Tourism Awards held on 27th Sep, 2018 at New Delhi.
To reach out to the
domestic market, a string of Partnership Meets were organized in Bhubaneswar,
Vijayawada, Ahmedabad, Vadodara, Surat, Lucknow, Indore, Nagpur, Pune and
Mumbai from July till October, 2018.
Kerala Tourism now
embarks on another ambitious marketing campaign in 2019 with a series of
Partnership Meets being organized in 10 cities across India. With remarkable
participation in Ludhiana, Chandigarh and Delhi in January this year, and in Jaipur, Bengaluru
and Hyderabad earlier this month, Kerala Tourism officials are delighted to be
in Kolkata now and look forward to the Partnership meets being held later this
month at Visakhapatnam, Chennai, and Madurai.
A combination of a
cultural feast of Kerala’s traditional art forms and its attractive
tourism products, these Partnership Meets provide opportunities for the tourism
Trade in the respective cities to interact with over 40 tourism industry
players from Kerala. The Partnership Meet also showcases the presentation of a
short 30 minute cultural program, a visual storytelling that showcases the
various art forms of Kerala, to unveil the village life and folklore of God’s
Own Country.
Further details can be
found on the Kerala Tourism website www.keralatourism.org
or please write to contact@keralatourismmarketing.org
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