
Last Updated: April 27, 2026
Quick Answer: alleppey homestay packages with activities
I woke up at 4:47 this morning. Not by alarm — the sound of rain on the tin roof started soft, then got heavier. I lay there listening. The air smelled like wet earth and the coconut fronds outside my window were dripping.
That moment, right there, is what I want you to feel when you come here.
I’m Jackson Louis. I run Evaan’s Casa on a small island in Alappuzha, what most people still call Alleppey. I grew up here. I know every channel, every boat that passes, every bird call before dawn. This isn’t a resort with a pool and a bar. It’s a home. A real one. And when you choose one of our alleppey homestay packages with activities, you’re not booking a room. You’re stepping into a way of life that’s been here longer than the tourist boats have been running.
This post is going to tell you exactly what that means. No fluff. Just the real stuff.
Let me be straight with you. A lot of places call themselves “homestays” but they’re really just small hotels with a family photo on the wall. That’s not what we do.
An alleppey homestay package with activities at Evaan’s Casa means you arrive by boat — a 6-minute ride from the mainland — and from that moment, everything is included. Your room, all your meals, and a set of activities that change with the season and your interest.
I don’t like the word “package” because it sounds like something shrink-wrapped. But that’s what people search for, so I’ll use it. Here’s what it actually looks like:
You wake up when you want. There’s no schedule pinned to your door. But if you’re up early, someone will take you out on the canoe. Not a big noisy motorboat. A small wooden canoe that glides through the narrow channels where the houseboats can’t go. You’ll see the water hyacinths parting, the morning mist sitting low, and the egrets standing still as statues.
You come back to breakfast. Then maybe a village walk. Or a toddy shop visit. Or you just sit on the verandah with a book. The point is — you choose.
Most people who book our alleppey homestay packages with activities tell me later that the best part wasn’t any single thing. It was the rhythm. The slow pace. The way the island forces you to stop rushing.
Here’s something most travel blogs won’t tell you: Alleppey is crowded. The main town has traffic, noise, and touts. The houseboat stretch on the main lake can feel like a highway during peak season.
But our island? It’s different.
You have to take a boat to reach us. There’s no road. No bridge. That six-minute ride changes everything. When the boatman cuts the engine and you drift the last few meters to our jetty, you feel it. The quiet. The air changes. The sound changes.
I’m probably biased, but I think that’s the real Alleppey. The one where the only sounds are birds and water and the occasional Vallam oars slapping the surface.
The isolation means something. It means no street lights. No car horns. At night, the stars are clear. The frogs start their chorus after sunset. If you’ve never slept with the sound of water lapping against a wooden jetty, you’re missing something primal.
Our alleppey homestay packages with activities lean into this isolation. We don’t try to fight it with loud music or pool parties. We let the island be what it is. And somehow, guests always relax faster here than anywhere else.
I’m not going to use the word “authentic” because everyone uses it. But I will tell you exactly what you’ll eat.
Every meal is cooked in our kitchen. Not by a chef with a toque. By people who have been making this food their whole lives. The ingredients come from our garden when they’re in season — coconut, banana, tapioca, curry leaves, sometimes jackfruit.
You’ll eat Karimeen Pollichathu. Pearl spot fish, marinated in a paste of green chilies, ginger, turmeric, and coconut, wrapped in a banana leaf, and cooked until the leaf chars slightly and the fish steams inside its own juices. The first bite — the smoky, spicy, coconutty flavor — is something I’ve never found anywhere else.
You’ll eat a Kerala Sadhya on a banana leaf. Rice in the center, surrounded by small mounds of sambar, avial, thoran, pachadi, olan, and that dark, sweet, sticky payasam for dessert. You eat with your right hand. No spoons. The rice mixes with the curries, and your fingers learn the texture.
Breakfast is often Appam with stew. The appam is a rice flour pancake with crispy lacy edges and a soft, spongy center. The stew is mild — coconut milk, cinnamon, cloves, and vegetables or chicken. Or maybe Puttu and Kadala curry. Puttu is steamed cylinders of rice flour and coconut. Kadala curry is black chickpeas in a thick, dark, onion-and-coconut gravy. Simple. Perfect.
The kitchen at our homestay prepares all of this fresh, twice a day. Lunch and dinner follow the traditional meal structure. Nothing is pre-made. Nothing is frozen. If you’re vegetarian, that’s easy here — most of our meals are naturally plant-heavy anyway.
I should mention the chai. It comes at 4 PM, without asking. Small steel cup, strong, sweet, with ginger and cardamom. You drink it watching the canal. That’s the ritual.
I’ve been hosting for years. Here are the things I wish every guest knew before they arrived:
This depends on what you want. Let me break it down by season, with no sugarcoating.
November to February. This is the peak season. The weather is cool and dry. Mornings are crisp. The sun is warm but not punishing. The backwaters are calm. Everything is green. This is when most tourists come, and for good reason. The downside? It’s busy. Not on our island, but in the town. Houseboats are everywhere. Prices are higher. If you want the best balance of weather and fewer crowds, come in late November or early February.
March to May. Summer. It’s hot. Really hot. The humidity can be intense. But here’s the thing — the mornings and evenings are still beautiful. The afternoons are for napping under a fan or swimming in the canal. The crowds thin out. Our alleppey homestay packages with activities are cheaper during this time. If you don’t mind the heat and you want a quieter experience, this works. Also, mango season. You’ll eat mangoes you’ve never heard of.
June to September. Monsoon. This is my favorite, but I might be biased again. The rain transforms everything. The canals fill up. The lotus blooms. The air smells like wet mud and fresh leaves. It’s dramatic. You’ll hear thunder rolling across the water. The rain on the roof is loud enough to make conversation difficult. Some guests find it romantic. Others find it oppressive. I’ll be honest — if you need sunshine every day, don’t come in monsoon. But if you want to see Kerala at its most raw, its most alive, come now. The rates are lowest. The island is nearly empty. You’ll have the canoe to yourself.
We’re about 15 minutes from the town center, but 6 of those minutes are by boat. You’ll park your car or take an auto to the jetty point, then we pick you up in our boat. It’s a short ride, but it feels like you’re leaving everything behind. That’s the point.
Yes. We get solo travelers often. The island is small and safe. Everyone knows everyone. Our family is here. We look out for our guests. That said, the usual precautions apply — don’t wander alone at night in unfamiliar places, keep your valuables secure. But generally, this is one of the safest places I know.
For canoe rides, bring a hat, sunglasses, and a light jacket if you’re going at dawn. For village walks, comfortable shoes that can get muddy. For the toddy shop, just bring an open mind. And always carry water. The heat can sneak up on you.
Yes, we have WiFi. It works well enough for browsing, email, and video calls. But it’s not fiber optic. Sometimes the weather affects it. I tell guests to plan for some offline time. Read a book. Watch the canal. The WiFi is there if you need it, but you might not want to use it.
Absolutely. We’ve had families with children of all ages. The island is a playground for kids — they can run around, see cows and goats, try fishing from the jetty. Just keep an eye on them near the water. The canals are deep in places.
Look, I know there are a hundred places to stay in Alleppey. You have options. Hotels, resorts, houseboats, luxury villas. I’m not going to pretend we’re for everyone.
But if you’re looking for something real — something that doesn’t feel like a hotel experience — then our island might be what you need.
The alleppey homestay packages with activities we offer aren’t about filling every hour. They’re about giving you a base. A place where you can eat well, sleep deeply, and explore at your own pace. The activities are there if you want them. The quiet is there if you need it.
I’ll be here, probably on the verandah, watching the water. If you come, we’ll share a cup of chai. I’ll tell you where the best toddy is that day. And you’ll leave knowing what this place actually feels like.
That’s the whole point.
If you want to know more about what we offer, take a look at Evaan’s Casa. Or just send me a message. I answer every one myself.
Till then, the island waits. The water keeps flowing. And whenever you’re ready, the boat will be there to bring you across.
Evaans Casa — Homestay near Backwaters
Thank you for your interest in Evaans Casa! 🌊
Our team will get back to you within 24 hours with availability and pricing details.
We couldn't send your enquiry. Please try again or contact us directly.