Kerala Travel

Kerala
is a green strip of land, in the South West corner of Indian peninsula. It has
only 1.1 8 per cent of the total area of the country but houses 3.43% of the the
country's population.
In 1956, when the states were reorganized, Kerala
was formed after tying the princely states of Travancore and Cochin with Malabar,
a province under Madras state.
Kerala may be divided into three geographical
regions: (1) High lands, (2) Midlands and (3) Lowlands. The Highlands slope down
from the Western Ghats which rise to an average height of 900 m, with a number
of peaks well over 1,800 m in height. This is the area of major plantations like
tea, coffee, rubber, cardamom and other spices.
The Midlands, lying
between the mountains and the lowlands, is made up of undulating hills and valleys.
This is an area of intensive cultivation. Cashew, coconut, areca nut, cassava
(tapioca), banana, rice, ginger, pepper, sugarcane and vegetables of myriad varieties
are grown in this area.
It is a purified world
in Kerala, the land of trees. A big, spreading tree purifies as much air as a
room air-conditioner. And the former is never switched off. The prolific, bustling,
vegetation acts like a massive, biological, air-filtration plant working round
the clock, round the year. Hence spending days in Kerala countryside is as if
spending in an air- purified environ; some times better than it. So is the rejuvenating
effect of the lush greenery of the state.
The wanton growth of trees
makes Kerala a herbarium. The four month-long, copious monsoon and recurrent flurry
make this land a perfect nursery for all living beings. Loitering under the canopy
of the foliage, you will feel blossoming the dreams. Thus, on a sojourn in Kerala,
away from the rough and tumble of cities, you're breathing freshly purified air
all the time.
Another piece de resistance of Kerala is the meandering
rivers which criss-cross the state physique like blood veins. Besides, water bodies
tucked away in thick forests also enhance the amazing beauty of the state. They
fertilize the' land, turn waste into the wealth of the rich, black, alluvial soil
on which the agrarian state thrive.
The Lowlands or the coastal area,
made up of river deltas, backwaters and the Arabian coast, is essentially a land
of coconuts and rice. Fisheries and coif industry constitute the major industries
of this area.

Kerala
is a land of rivers and backwaters. Forty-four rivers (41 west-flowing and 3 east-flowing}
criss-cross the state physique along with countless runlets. During summer, these
monsoon-fed rivers will turn into rivulets especially in the upper parts of Kerala.
Backwaters are an attractive, economically valuable feature of Kerala.
These include lakes and ocean in lets which stretch irregularly along the Kerala
coast. The biggest among these backwaters is the Vembanad lake, with an area of
200 sq km, which opens out into the Arabian Sea at Cochin port.
The
Periyar, Pamba, Manimala, Achenkovil, Meenachil and Moovattupuzha rivers drain
into this lake.The other important backwaters are Veli, Kadhinam kulam, Anjengo
(Anju Thengu),Edava, Nadayara, Paravoor. Ashtamudi (Quilon)
Flora:
Kerala has over 25% of India's 15,000 plant species. Among them include endangered
and rare species, flowering plants, fungies, lichens and mosses. The state's forest
wealth include tropical wet evergreen, semi-green and tropical most deciduous.
Teak, Mahagoney, Rosewood and Sandalwood are common, the forests abound with orchids,
anthirium, balsam, and medicinal plants. banyan figs, bamboo as well as 40,000
years old grasslands. Mangroves are seen in coastal areas and low, morass lands.
So fertile is the state, thanks to rivers and dams that are replenished by copious
rain in Western Ghats.
Kerala, India's most advanced society :
A hundred percent literate people. World-class health care systems. India's lowest
infant mortality and highest life expectancy rates. The highest physical quality
of life in India. Peaceful and pristine, Kerala is also India's cleanest State.