New Energies Collection India

Part of the New Energies Collection, this adventure highlights locations and properties committed to renewable energy and sustainable practices. Embracing a new eco-friendly movement, it showcases innovative technologies like solar panels and windmills to save energy and reduce carbon footprints.

Experience conservation-focused safaris in national parks, enjoy traditional dance dramas that reenact great Indian epics, explore centuries-old tea plantations prioritizing sustainability, and discover the rich lifestyles along Kerala’s waterways during an overnight houseboat journey.

 

Designed Differently, Eplored Sustainably.

 

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New Energies Collection

COUNTRIES VISITED

India

STARTING AT..

Price starts at $800 Land per person, per day, double occupancy.

TOUR LENGTH

13

Tour Highlights/Full Description

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  • Enjoy safaris along broad roads in conservation-sensitive Nagarhole National Park that offer opportunities for wildlife viewing, including some 270 bird species
  • Discover the strength and vigor of traditional Kathakali culture during performances of dance drama reenacting great Indian epics
  • Explore centuries-old tea plantations that today incorporate sustainable practices to reduce and reuse resources
  • Watch the traditional lifestyles that unfold on the labyrinth of shimmering lakes and canals that make up waterways of Kerala waterways during an overnight houseboat trip
  • This adventure encompasses locations and properties seeking to incorporate renewable energies in daily operations from solar photovoltaics mounted on the roofs to captive wind farms, saving energy while reducing carbon footprints

 

Day 1: Arrive Bangalore
Upon arrival at Bangalore Airport, you are welcomed by a Big Five representative who will escort to your hotel in a private vehicle. The remainder of the day is at leisure. Your hotel is conveniently located in the commercial heart of Bangalore, close to the business districts and IT hubs of Bangalore.

This hotel was accorded the highest rating for green buildings in the world — the LEED India Platinum Rating. The first glimpse of the hotel reveals its intention to take the greener path. Four living green vertical walls welcome guests into warm interiors inspired by French botanist Patrick Blanc. They soften the enclosed stuffiness often associated with hotel lobbies. These oil free, gravity mocking steel backed gardens, shoot up to the 12th floor and encompass more than 1,500 plants fed by drip irrigation. In addition, the hotel received almost all their electrical needs through captive wind farms.  ITC Gardenia – Luxury Room

Day 2: Bangalore / Kabini
This morning, you have an early morning departure for a five-hour transfer by road to Kabini, arriving in time for lunch. Your lodge sits in the heart of Nagarhole National Forest, known for supporting the highest density of herbivores in Asia as well as three major predators.  Surrounded by the Kabini River on three sides, the lodge draws energy generated from Windmill.  The palm-thatched huts are built in authentic Kuruba village style and feature a luxurious large living room, bedroom, en-suite bathroom and a private open-air inner courtyard with its own plunge pool or Jacuzzi. Evolve Back Kabini received GreenOtels Award in 2018 – Green Best Practices in the Indian Hospitality Industry 2018 for measures such as utilizing the biogas it produces with the waste to  prepare food in staff cafeteria. Other eco-friendly measures include organic farming and a sewage water treatment plant in the campus.

This afternoon, you set out on a jungle safari into Nagarahole National Park, a rich forest cover of hills, valleys, streams and waterfalls. This is the 37th Tiger Reserve in India, and also a UNESCO World Heritage Site with three parks nearby – Bandipur, Mudumalai and Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary. Bengal tigers, Indian leopard, sloth bear, striped hyena are among the predators that can be spotted in the park along with herbivores including elephants, chital, sambar deer, and barking deer is also spotted around the park.  Evolve Back Kabini – Pool Hut (B,L,D)

Day 3: Kabini
Today enjoy morning safari by shared vehicle in terrain that is often ravaged by forest fires, and the Nagarhole wildlife is testimony to the resilience of nature. Your safari takes you along broad roads that offer opportunities for wildlife viewing. Birdwatchers will enjoy the park’s more than 270 bird species, notably the critically endangered Oriental white-backed vulture, the lesser adjutant, the greater spotted eagle and the Nilgiri wood-pigeon.  Evolve Back Kabini – Pool Hut (B,L,D)

Day 4: Kabini / Mysore
This morning, you are driven two and a half hours to Mysore, and check in to your hotel. This evening you enjoy a guided walk in the heart of the city, passing grand old structures as your guide reveals the  unfolding story of Mysore. Learn about the opulent lives of the maharajas and how one of the world’s richest men lived. Explore a century old market with is vibrancy and color. Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel – Business Class Room (B)

Day 5: Mysore
This morning, visit Srirangapattana, an island fortress in the Kaveri River, once the sight of the battles between the British and Tipu Sultan, the “Tiger of Mysore”.  Visit Tipu Sultan’s Summer Palace and the Jumma Masjid Mosque before stopping for lunch at a local restaurant specializing in authentic regional cuisine.

In the afternoon, visit Mysore City Palace, designed by an English architect and completed in 1912. A part of the Palace is still occupied by the former Maharaja from the Wodeyar family. Built in Indo- Sacracenic style with domes, turrets, arches and colonnades, the palace is a treasure house of exquisite carvings and works of art from all over the world.   The collection of stained glass, mirrors and intricately carved rosewood doors inlaid with ivory is magnificent. Radisson Blu Plaza Hotel (B,L)

Day 6: Mysore / Cochin
This morning you are transferred to the Mysore Airport to board your flight for Cochin. Upon arrival at Cochin Airport, a Big Five representative welcomes you and escorts you to hotel in a private vehicle.

In the evening you can set out on a Sunset Harbor Cruise along Cochin’s coastline. Take in the sights of a city that thrives on a port economy. Barges and boats bring ashore goods from far and wide. The Cochin lagoon opens into the Arabian Sea. Enjoy the sight of the quaint cantilever Chinese fishing nets against the backdrop of a splendid sunset before returning to your hotel moored on a historic stretch of Cochin’s famed harbor, just a short walk away from Fort Cochin. The Brunton Boatyard Hotel was resurrected from the remains of a Victorian shipyard. It retains the charm from its busy shipbuilding days in the 1800s. Vintage Dutch maps, small navigation devices and an ancient anchor decorate the premises.

The hotel has crafted unique cuisine inspired by age-old and singular recipes of the Jewish, Anglo Indian, Gujarati and Christian communities of Fort Kochi and its environs.  Its eclectic cuisine and varied culinary styles along with the heritage language of its architecture all reference Fort Kochi’s colonial past. Yet, honoring today’s echo-friendly demands, the hotel’s water is heated using solar photovoltaics mounted on the roofs, saving energy while reducing its carbon footprints. Indeed, water is a precious resource. The seasonal monsoon rains are collected and stored in underground tanks, where the water is later treated and used for a variety of purposes that include washing, cooking and drinking, which reduces the number of plastic water bottles by some 15,000 units of plastic water bottles that would have otherwise entered our waste stream. These actions help reduce the net use of subterranean water, easing the pressure on the environment.  The Brunton Boatyard Hotel – Deluxe Sea View Room (B)

Day 7: Cochin
A true melting pot, Cochin, or Kochi, is one of the most dynamic, vibrant and energetic cities in South India. One of the most important trading posts on the fabled Spice Route, Cochin sports several vestiges of its multi-cultural past from traditional Chinese fishing nets to Dutch palaces, Sephardic synagogues to Portuguese forts along the shores of the Arabian Sea. Today, Cochin has a thriving arts and cultural scene and hosts the Cochin Biennale – a major art event in Asia, every winter. Several galleries, boutiques, and artisanal restaurants stand cluster in the area, especially near Fort Cochin area. Spice, fish and antique markets continue to flourish side by side.

Today, explore Fort Cochin on a leisurely stroll with your guide through the by-lanes of Fort Cochin, which bears a marked European influence from Cochin’s British and Dutch colonial eras. Fort Cochin is known for its long line of distinctive Chinese fishing nets. According to local legend, the unique nets were introduced on the Malabar Coast by the emissaries of Kubla Khan’s court. Stroll down to St. Francis Church, originally built by the Portuguese as a Catholic Church, it later became a Protestant church under the Dutch and later still, Anglican under the British. It finally became a part of the Church of South India in the post-Independence era.

The Church’s colonial past is evident still today. Men still operate the church’s enormous punkha fans by pulling on their ropes by hand. Continue past the Durbar Hall and the Dutch cemetery, where Dutch traders were laid to rest far from home, and the Jewish synagogue, the one monument to the family of Jews in Cochin who can trace their origins to King Solomon. Walk down to Mattancherry Palace, built by the Portuguese as a gift of tribute to the Raja of Cochin. The Palace was later renovated by the Dutch and became known as Dutch Palace. Today it houses a small but exquisite museum of royal artefacts, some of which are extremely unusual. Then stop at the Mattancherry Spice Market and the Kochi International Pepper Exchange, a riotous warehouse where traders stake bids at the daily pepper auction. There is also a dry ginger depot that sells a product that finds good use in the Ayurveda industry.

This evening a special treat awaits you – discover the strength and vigor of a traditional Kathakali dance drama as it reenacts episodes from great Indian epics. The extremely stylized gestures, the elaborate make-up, the masks and the splendid costumes of the all-male dancers creates an unrivalled pageantry. The Brunton Boatyard Hotel – Deluxe Sea View Room (B)

Day 8: Cochin / Munnar
This morning you set out on a four-and-a-half hour journey to Munnar. Upon arrival, check into your accommodation, Spice Tree, a natural mountain retreat. The picturesque little town of Munnar, nestled amidst acres of sprawling tea estates and verdant forests, was once the summer retreat of the British government in South India. Still with colonial charm, its name means “three rivers,” for its location at the confluence of three mountain streams. Besides tea, Munnar is also known for spices like cardamom and pepper. Munnar’s rugged landscape offers opportunities for walks and treks through the town and nearby villages.

This afternoon, experience the tea trail with the lush, verdant slopes of a tea estate where you glimpse a centuries-old industry. Follow this with a visit to the Tea Museum, which houses curios, colonial furniture, photographs and vintage machinery representing a turning point for the tea industry at the time. Explore teas of the area during a tea-tasting demonstration, with infusions of tea varieties. Return to your hotel, which was constructed so that no energy is used for lighting during daytime. In fact, nearly half of its total energy usage comes from the sun. Spice Tree minimizes the use of plastic, relying on recyclable products. The resort uses organic herbs and spice farming to create its tantalizing menus. The goal is to reduce and reuse resources, including sewage water, which is treated and used for irrigation. Spice Tree – Classic Room with Jacuzzi (B)

Day 9: Munnar
Begin the day with a visit of Srishti, a crafts center specializing in handmade paper, employing the differently abled.  See how the paper is made from a variety of materials like the leaves of eucalyptus, lemongrass, lantana and pineapple, and is then crafted into delightful objects from notepads to containers. The center is a unique venture of a corporate giant, Tata, for the rehabilitation of the physically challenged dependents of its employees. The remainder of the day at leisure to enjoy the facilities at your hotel. Spice Tree – Classic Room with Jacuzzi (B)

Day 10: Munnar / Alleppey
This morning after a leisurely breakfast, drive to Alleppey to explore the backwaters of Kerala during an overnight houseboat trip.  This bewildering labyrinth of shimmering waterways, composed of lakes and canals, lined with dense vegetation preserves. Rural Kerala is completely cut off from the outside world. While on the cruise, you witness the authentic culture and lifestyle in the Kerala countryside.

The old boats, Kettuvalams, have cruised the backwaters for centuries. They were designed for easy navigation, comfort and for carrying cargoes of spice and grain. Your cruise is designed to give you an understanding of the uniqueness of these vessels that are part of a long tradition and are still built with the same materials and employing the same construction.  That means using handspun coir products from Kunjunni Chetan’s traditional wooden coir making unit. It is a gesture of commitment to this old craft, once was a major economic activity of these parts. Spice Coast Cruises – Deluxe Cabin (B,L,D)

Day 11: Alleppey / Kumarakom
After leisurely breakfast, disembark from houseboat and commence your drive to Kumarakom. Upon arrival, check into your hotel and enjoy the remainder of the day at leisure. Coconut Lagoon is a charming resort in a century-old mansion, offering heritage rooms, bungalows and private pool villas, with a swimming pool, Ayurvedic facilities, yoga and meditation center and recreation area. Coconut Lagoon offers insight into  traditional  Keralan  life,  offering  Kalari (Keralan  martial art)  training; Kathakali (Kerala’s classical dance) performances and traditional music concerts. Cooking lessons highlight the uses of traditional spices as well as traditional and hybrid varieties of rice, vegetables and plantains.

Coconut Lagoon uses organic cultivation methods that eliminate pesticides and chemical fertilizers, and utilize bio-manures like vermicompost, neem cake and bone meal. Lime stone is used in the initial stage to reduce the acidity in the soil.  The entire water requirement of the resort is met internally by a reverse osmosis plant. The water is collected from the lake and from rain-water harvesting pond. Filtration is through the sand filter, carbon-filter, ultra-filter and reverse osmosis, which is supplied in the guest room shower and wash basin. Water needs for cooking and drinking is met by reverse osmosis water. Traditional and hybrid varieties of rice, vegetables and plantains. Solar heating supplies hot water to the resort’s 50 rooms and the kitchen. Renewable energy from the biogas plant as well as other sources produce 500 watts light energy, eliminating greenhouse gas emissions.

Other conservation methods used by the resort include a bio gas plant that creates Methane gas, used in staff mess, and the slurry is used as an ideal manure in the garden; a sewage treatment plant that works on the latest technology; bio mass digestor, which eliminates chemical fertilizer; a plastic eradication program to reduce the use of plastic bags at the resort and in the community.  Coconut Lagoon – Heritage Bungalow (B)

Day 12: Kumarakom
Drive out to Vechoor village and visit the charming Phillip Kutty Farm. Beautifully situated along the backwaters, the farm grows coconut, spices, fruit, and much more. The farm is run by the family who owns it and today you will enjoy a delightful interactive session on Syrian Christian cuisine and learn how to cook some of these delicious dishes. The backwaters add their influence on the food at the farm with fish, duck, and poultry featuring prominently alongside farm fruit and vegetables.  Coconut Lagoon – Heritage Bungalow (B,L)

Day 13: Kumarakom / Cochin / Depart
Today, drive about an hour and a half to Cochin Airport to board your onward flight. (B)

Land only, double occupancy. From $800 per person per day double occupancy.

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