
Lakshadweep
Ten inhabited atolls 400 km off Kerala. Permit-only. Coir villages, reef lagoons, and a tuna economy that still runs the day. What makes Lakshadweepworth a long conversation isn’t in any guidebook. It’s in the rhythm of who runs the lodges, which naturalist is in the field that month, and which lanes the festival actually unfolds in. We plan trips here the way locals plan a weekend — knowing what’s open, what’s in season, what’s worth skipping.
Things worth doing
- Pole-and-line tuna boats out of Kavaratti at first light
- Snorkelling Bangaram lagoon on February neap tides
- A coir-spinning afternoon in a Kadmat village courtyard
- Mappila kitchen lunch — tuna moilee, kadachakka, red rice

Who plans this · Coast
Reena on Lakshadweep.
We avoid the resort strip. The coastlines we plan are working coastlines — fishing villages, mangrove channels, monasteries built into rock above the sea.
“The places that change you are the ones you couldn't have found yourself.”
When to go
- Oct–Feb
- Cool air, prime sightings, parks at full life.
- Mar–Apr
- Leaner forest, easier sightings if you can take the heat.
- Jun–Sep
- Many parks closed for monsoon; cultural and Himalayan trips shine.
Pairs well with
Three places we often plan in the same trip.

Uttarakhand
Auli & Garhwal
The Garhwal high country — Auli, Joshimath, the Valley of Flowers — for travellers who want meadows and serious mountains in one trip.

West Bengal
Bishnupur
The terracotta temple town of the Malla kings. Brick the colour of dried blood, panels that read like a Mahabharata graphic novel.

Rajasthan
Bundi
A blue-painted hill town with a 14th-century palace nobody renovated, stepwells in residential lanes, and Kipling's old guesthouse still standing.