Fort Kochi Travel Blog, India, Kerala

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Fort Cochin in Kerala is also known as Kochin, Kochi or Cochi, I’ve seen it written every-which-way during our time here. It is a historic jewel of southern India. People visit for Fort Kochi itself, a region in the city of Kochi and also known as Old Kochi. It is famous for history, spice, kathakali dancing, and those iconic Chinese fishing nets. It’s one of the nicest places in the whole of India, we think. This Fort Kochi travel blog was written to reflect our time in Kochi, but we also include points of interest and things to do in Kochi.

Godowns Fort Kochi Kerala
Wonderful Fort Kochi, Kerala. It’s a really nice place to visit in India.

Fort Kochi Travel Blog

This is post 6 of our random, hectic, unplanned India travel blog. If you haven’t been following so far, blogging time is very short, my usual highly polished posts have been abandoned in favor of diary-style updates.

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Fort Cochi Kerala India photos

In part 5 I was having tantrums and swearing I’d never set foot in India again, Cochi (Kochi) soothed my tattered nerves and made us all very happy.

Part 7 will be Kovalam Beach, Kerala, another few days of total loveliness on Kerala’s amazing beaches before we fly out of India to Kathmandu.

Kathakali performers getting ready in Fort Cochi India
Part of the Kathakali show is watching the performers get ready. This includes elaborate make-up, putting things in their eyes to make them turn red, and gluing on various parts of their new persona.

We’ve had some fantastic experiences in India and at this point I don’t want to leave, but Nepal is a fabulous country, we have plenty more adventures to look forward to in coming months. You can see our Nepal travel blog here.

If you need our full India Travel Blog with guides and tips for travel in India, you’ll need this link.

Fort Cochi Kerala Cochin

 

Luxury Accommodation in Fort Kochi, Cheap Price, No Worries

Budget luxury hotel in Fort Cochin. This is the life!

The boys and I fell in love with the first guest house we looked at in Fort Kochi.

It held a prime location, right on Vasco Da Gama square ( which has a great playground for the kids), just steps away from the iconic Chinese fishing nets and was in a beautiful, old, colonial-style building.

We looked at other guest houses and homestays, they were all of a great standard and beautifully furnished, but Fort Bridge View won our custom for its air-con, deluxe bathroom with rain shower, TV, delicious rooms and included breakfast.

This was the first time we’ve not had a bucket and scoop bathroom in India.

How much did this slice of luxury set us back? Just 2300 Rps, 23 pounds. Expensive by Indian standards, we normally pay around 800Rps, but this was a special treat and the price was on a par with those of say, Bangkok or Malaysia.

Of course, when breakfast is included, you can deduct at least 5,000Rps from the hotel price as what we would have spent anyway.

Breakfast included, and very good it was too, western and Indian style.

The hotel and food worked out brilliantly, we loved our stay at Fort Bridge View Guest House and Restaurant, ( click through and you’ll see our room, top right).

If you’re looking for accommodation in Cochi / Kochin, check Agoda, it’s or most trusted, preferred booking engine for Asia and don’t forget the reward points, we just cashed ours in for a bargain stay in Chennai.

History, Art, Culture and Enjoyment in Fort Cochin

Hauling nets Kochi
Chef helping fishermen haul in the Chinese fishing nets back in 2001. They’re still much the same, but the guys will want money for a photo now.

We had a really packed 2 days on Kochi, there is so much to do on the island ( it’s not an island, but feels like one) and on Ernakulum, the mainland ( it’s not the mainland).

Obviously we had to look at the Chinese fishing nets, stroll under the beyond-huge rain trees and just soak up the historic and architectural appeal of this historic spice trade town, but there are quite a few must-dos to get through in Kochi too.

Kathakali Dancing in Fort Kochi

Kathakali performers apply their elaborate stage make up in Cochin.

A traditional Keralan Kathakali performance should be high on anyone’s list.

The green faced anti hero with his red stained eyes looked a bit freaky to my younger child, so D ( age 10) and I went to the performance alone.

Chef and I had seen a show 15 years ago, he was happy to opt out.

The Old Synagog and Jew Town Kochi

The old synagogue, Fort Kochin, you have to pay to get in and no photography allowed, which is annoying.

Jew Town and the old synagogue are a 30p rickshaw ride away from Vasco Da Gama square.

This part of town is very up-market, plenty of well-heeled package tourists visit and prices and standards are high. We enjoyed a luxurious nimbu pani in a fancy little cafe and browsed shops and warehouses full of antiques and artifacts.

The spice trade is still alive and strong, the spice warehouses or go-downs are packed with exotic smelling hessian sacks in some parts of town.

Spice Warehouses – Go-Downs of Kochi

The spice trade still exists in Fort Cochin.

The Indian Coffee House

James and I had to make a pilgrimage to the Indian Coffee House in Ernakulum, just paces from the ferry port.

We stayed in a guest house a few doors up in 2001 and ate our breakfast here every morning.

Delicious dosa, idly and vada served by splendidly liveried waiters.

The kids enjoyed the experience and it gave me a chance to point out Nehru and Indira Ghandi hanging on the wall along with the megastar Mahatma of the same name and a 4th portrait, the revered founder of the Coffee House chain.

Make sure you visit a branch of The Indian Coffee House while you’re in India.

The Largest Shiva Temple in Kerala

A short walk up the road is the largest Shiva temple in Kerala. It actually was’t that large, but a neat place to visit.

The Ferry

The ferry itself is a must-do too, I have never taken one of these boats and not seen dolphins. It also gave me a chance to queue jump, the ladies only line was much shorter than the men’s.

At 16p for 4 tickets, how can you not go?

Lining up for ferry tickets from Cochi to Ernakulum. The ladies’ queue was much shorter than the men’s.

The boys made a new friend on the boat, a young music shop owner, they chatted about harmonicas and D has been teaching himself to play from You Tube ever since.

Cochi ferry Kochin
Bonding over a harmonica on the ferry. That socialisation thing that homeschoolers supposedly don’t do.

The Grave of Vasco da Gama and St Francis’s Church

Vasco da Gama is a constant companion of ours on our travels. Along with St Francis Xavier ( whose mummified body we saw just a few days ago in Goa), our journey has crossed their historic paths many times.

In Kochi the two meet, the original grave of Vasco is in St Francis’s church under the punkas, originally pulled by punka wallahs for the Catholic congregation.

St Francis Xavier church, home to the original grave of Vasco da Gama and punkahs.

Kochi Street Art

As we rode around Kochi in tuk tuks we spotted some amazing street art, I need to Google and find out more about it, but it was so good I stopped to take pictures.

Great Worldschooling!

So even the cynical can see how much school-type learning we did here.

The spice trade, exploration, history, religion and how it spread around the world ( both the Jews and the Catholics).

There is a large Muslim population in Kochi, too, so if my kids didn’t know a lot about that faith already, they could have brushed up.

All that and art, dance and culture, the Indian epic Mahabharata, so much crammed into 2 short days. All these jigsaw pieces fit beautifully together with what we have learned in other ports on the spice route and back home in London. We liked Fort Kochi a lot.

Fort Cochi Cochin India

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Fort Cochi Kerala Cochin

As always, I’m in a rush, most of these places will get detailed posts later. You cannot run a professional travel blog and travel full time, don’t believe the hype!

We liked Fort Kochi a lot. Thanks for reading, hit like or share to make me happy, leave a comment to show me you care. You can find more posts on destinations in India below, or head back to our main India Travel Guide at the link above.

If you'd like to hire a car during your stay, use this car rental comparison tool to find the best deal!

We also suggest you take a look at this company to get a quote for all kinds of the more tricky adventure or extended travel insurance.

Try Stayz / VRBO for an alternative way to find rentals on homes/apartments/condos in any country!

About the author
Alyson Long
Alyson Long is a British medical scientist who jumped ship to chase dreams. A former Chief Biomedical Scientist at London's West Middlesex Hospital she started in website creation and travel writing in 2011. Alyson is a full-time blogger and travel writer, a published author, and owns several websites. World Travel Family is the biggest. A lifetime of wanderlust and over 6 years of full-time travel, plus a separate 12 month gap year, has given Alyson and the family some travel expert smarts to share with you on this world travel site. Today Alyson still travels extensively to update this site and continue her mission to visit every country, but she's often at home on her farm in Australia.

23 thoughts on “Fort Kochi Travel Blog, India, Kerala”

  1. Great article, Thank you very much for sharing this awesome post about the Fort Kochi Travel Blog, India, Kerala You might also check Tours & Travels in Cochin

    Reply
  2. Great article, Thank you very much for sharing this awesome post about the Fort Kochi Travel You might also check Corporate Tour Packages.

    Reply
  3. Wonderful narration about Cochin.

    Thanks and Regards,

    ARK Hotel and Convention Centre, Palakkad

    Reply
  4. Delighted to read a well written but brief report on Fort Cochin and surroundings. You missed out mentioning the settled Gujarati community in Mattancherry, Kochi, just a few minutes from Fort Cochin. Though a passing indirect reference is made, a little more on the Palace Museum at Aanavathil gate in Mattancherry and reference to Gujarati and a few popular small hotels for some excellent Kerala/Gujarati food would make the article complete. Hopefully you will do needful in future. All in all, a good written report.

    Reply
    • Yeah… Maybe we’ll be able to add more when we’re allowed to travel again. Right now we’ve been stuck behind closed borders in Australia for what feels like forever. I am losing my sanity being stuck here. No vaccines yet either.

      Reply
  5. Great Article, even though being a native of Kochi. I find this article really intuitive.

    Reply
  6. Nice Blog!! Very beautiful places! Pictures are great and the blog is very easy to read.

    Reply
  7. Ernakulam is the District & Cochin or Kochi is the name of a place in this District.

    There are many other lesser known places in Ernakulam District like Vytila, Kaloor etc.

    But the Name of the place Cochin is famous & well-known.

    Many traveling to Cochin Enquire about Cross Massage in Cochin

    Where a Female Therapists gives an Authentic Full Body Massage with Medicated Herbal Essential Oils.

    All Spas do not have such Facility & rare to find.

    I & my friend had a Very Good Cross Gender Massage in Cochin.

    Reply
  8. Hi Alyson,

    I’d like to bring to your notice that Fort Cochin is a part of Cochin city. Earlier the city was known as Ernakulam and a few years back the name was changed to Kochi. The island part of Kochi city is known as Fort Cochin.

    Keep travelling, be safe, be happy

    Shiva

    Reply
  9. Hi Alyson

    great insight and informative. I would like your attention to activities in Fort Kochi such as Home Cooking Demonstration. I enrolled for this unique experience during my stay in fortkochi. It just opened up possibilities of local interaction, local varieties of spices, locally available sea food and much more..COOK with ROSY is a worthwhile mentioning. Culinary experience with Rosy does engage you and what a feast..!!

    Reply
  10. How interesting that the men and women have separate lines! The world is such a great classroom!
    Natalie, The Educational Tourist

    Reply
  11. Most interesting to learn about a part of the world I have always wanted to visit.

    Reply
  12. Hi Alyson, I’ve been following your blog for several months now as we prepare to travel with our family in the coming year. India is a country that we’ve been hesitant to include in our itinerary, but your posts have been helpful……I think we will give it a try!

    Reply
    • Good to hear Renate. If you need any more help shoot me an email. We’re planning to come back and do north India in a few months, that end is harder. I would suggest, for a family, trying to book some trains in advance. Register with cleartrip AND Indian railways, it’s kind of a pain, but you need to do it. It is possible from outside the country. And an American Express card comes in very handy, it’s the only foreign card India railways will take.

      Reply
      • Great advice -thanks! We will likely be in Rajasthan in November – maybe our paths will cross!

        Reply
  13. Beautiful … wish I could take all the kids of my school to live this !
    So sad about KTM. We have friends there, it’s dreadful…

    Reply
  14. India is a country I would like to visit. As a less experienced traveller I appreciate your posts, to help me decide where to visit and stay. I’d be having to find the more comfortable options. Also, so sad about Nepal. My thoughts are with the people affected.

    Reply
  15. Hi there!! Love your posts!! We were worried about you going to Nepal.
    Just a note – did you accidentally put an extra 0 in your Rps prices within this post? (Near the start when you were talking about cost of accomm and food)

    Reply

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