
Last Updated: March 05, 2026
Quick Answer: homestay Thathampally
I wake before the sun most days. The first thing I hear is the soft, rhythmic knocking of a wooden canoe pole against its hull, somewhere far out on the black water. The air is cool and carries the damp, green smell of water hyacinth and wet earth. From our kitchen, I can already hear the gentle hiss of the kettle, a sound that means my mother is starting the day.
This is my normal. It has been since I was a boy running barefoot on these narrow paths. The memory of those mornings is why I built Evaan’s Casa with my family. We wanted to share not just a room, but this specific feeling of a Kerala backwater morning. It’s a quiet that settles deep in your bones.
If you look at a map of Alappuzha, you’ll see the famous main canals. Thathampally is not there. It’s a collection of smaller, older waterways a little to the north. It’s a working village, not a tourist stage.
Here, the canals are lined with homes where people still fish for their dinner. You’ll see women washing clothes at the stone steps, their laughter echoing off the water. The pace is set by the sun and the tide, not by a tour bus schedule.
For us, Thathampally is the real heartbeat of the backwaters. It’s where my father bought his first fishing net. It’s where the toddy tapper still climbs the coconut palms at dawn. The water here tells a quieter, truer story.
Evaan’s Casa is on a small island. There is no road, no bridge. To reach us, you take a six-minute boat ride from the Thathampally jetty. That short journey is the most important part of your stay.
It is the moment you leave the world of cars and concrete behind. The putter of the boat’s diesel engine becomes your soundtrack. You glide past floating ferns and lily pads, watching the village recede into a green blur.
When you step onto our island, you feel the shift. The air is clearer. The only traffic is the occasional duck family paddling by. This isolation isn’t about being cut off; it’s about being fully connected to a different rhythm. You can’t rush. You simply are here.
At night, the darkness is profound and beautiful. The stars are shockingly bright. The only lights are the warm yellow glow from our home and the distant flicker of kerosene lamps from other island houses across the water.
You will eat what my family eats. Every meal is cooked in our kitchen, with ingredients that come from our garden, the local fish market, or the vendor who paddles his canoe to our jetty.
Breakfast might be soft, steamed puttu with kadala curry, the chickpeas spiced with black pepper and coconut. The aroma of roasting coconut for the chutney will wake you up better than any alarm clock. My mother’s fish curry is a lesson in balance—tart from kodampuli, fiery from green chilies, rounded out with creamy coconut milk.
If you are lucky, we will prepare Karimeen Pollichathu. We marinate the pearl spot fish in a paste of turmeric, chili, and ginger, wrap it in a banana leaf, and pan-roast it. The leaf blackens and steams, locking in every flavor. You eat it with your hands, the taste of the backwaters itself.
For a special treat, we might lay a full Kerala Sadhya on a banana leaf. It’s a festival of textures and tastes: the crunch of pickle, the smoothness of avial, the sweetness of sambar, the crispness of pappadam. It is a meal that demands you sit, share, and talk for hours.
The monsoon, from June to August, is my secret favorite. The rain doesn’t fall; it roars on our tiled roof. The backwaters swell, turning our island even greener. You can sit on the veranda with a cup of chai, watching the rain dimple the lake’s surface. It is cool, dramatic, and deeply peaceful.
Winter, from November to February, is what most guests prefer. The air is dry and golden. The sunrises are clean and bright. It’s perfect for long, slow canoe rides where you can spot otters playing and water birds nesting. The nights are crisp, ideal for sleeping under a mosquito net with the windows wide open.
Summer, from March to May, is warm and vibrant. The heat of the day is balanced by the constant breeze off the water. This is when the village is most active—harvesting, fishing, preparing for the rains. The mango tree by our kitchen bears fruit, and you might just taste a fresh mango pickle made that morning.
There is no wrong time. Each season paints the backwaters with a different brush. It depends on whether you want the lush drama of the rains or the sunny calm of winter.
We arrange a direct auto-rickshaw from either place to our Thathampally boat jetty. The ride is about 20 minutes. From there, our boat will be waiting for you. Just send us your arrival details, and we will handle the rest. You won’t be lost.
Yes, absolutely. Our island is private and vehicle-free. Children love the boat rides and feeding the ducks. However, the water is everywhere, and our compound is open. Young children must be supervised near the water’s edge at all times, just like in any home by a lake.
A good hat for the sun, sunscreen, and any specific medication you need. While we are only a short boat ride from a pharmacy, it’s not as simple as walking down the street. Also, a power bank for your phone is useful, as you might want to take many photos on the water.
Our pricing is per room and includes all meals, boat transfers, and a guided canoe trip. It is designed to be simple. For the most accurate and current rates for your dates, the best way is to contact us directly through our website. We are a family, not a large hotel, so we can answer your questions personally.
For me, this place is more than a business. It is my childhood home, the water I learned to swim in, the soil where we grow our vegetables. When you come to Evaan’s Casa, you are stepping into that story. You are sharing our meals, our boat, and our view of the sky. You become part of the island’s rhythm for a little while. And I believe that is a kind of peace that stays with you long after you’ve left our jetty, waving goodbye from the boat.
Evaans Casa — Homestay near Backwaters
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