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The Case for Regenerative Destinations


A few years ago, when we began transforming a rubber plantation into what is now Kochattante Kolayi (KOKO), we weren’t trying to create another tourist destination.

We were asking a much simpler question.

Can a place become healthier because people choose to visit it?

That question has quietly guided almost every decision we’ve made since.

For a long time, tourism has been measured by numbers—visitor arrivals, hotel occupancy, revenue, and economic impact. These indicators are important, but they don’t tell the whole story.

I’ve often wondered what happens after the visitor leaves.

Is the stream cleaner than it was a year ago? Are birds, frogs, butterflies, and native plants returning? Do local people feel more connected to their village? Are traditional practices finding relevance again? Has tourism encouraged us to care more deeply for the place rather than simply consume it?

These questions led me to the idea of regenerative destinations.

Unlike sustainable tourism, which largely focuses on reducing negative impacts, regenerative tourism asks something more demanding: How can tourism actively improve the ecological, cultural, and social health of a place?

For me, regeneration isn’t a strategy or a trend. It is a way of thinking.

It means restoring ecosystems instead of merely protecting what’s left. It means strengthening local communities instead of treating them as service providers. It means creating experiences that help visitors understand a place, not just pass through it.

At Kochattante Kolayi, this thinking has taken shape through many small decisions rather than one grand master plan.

We created a frog pond because healthy amphibian populations are a sign of a healthy ecosystem. We brought back paddy cultivation because agriculture is part of Kerala’s ecological and cultural identity. We continue planting native species because they belong to this landscape. Every decision is an attempt to work with nature instead of against it.


Our location has reinforced this philosophy.

KOKO is situated in Perumkulam, recognised as Kerala’s first and India’s second Book Village—PusthakaGramam. Books remind us that knowledge is meant to be shared, questioned, and carried forward. In many ways, villages deserve the same approach. They are living repositories of stories, traditions, craftsmanship, farming practices, and relationships with nature that have evolved over generations.

If tourism cannot help preserve and strengthen these living systems, then we must ask ourselves what kind of legacy we are creating.

Regeneration is not about building more.

Often, it is about restoring what has quietly disappeared—wetlands, biodiversity, native trees, farming traditions, community spaces, and our relationship with the natural world.


This work is slow.

Nature doesn’t regenerate according to project timelines. Communities aren’t strengthened through quick interventions. Trust, biodiversity, and resilience all take time to grow.

Perhaps that is precisely why regenerative destinations matter today.

Around the world, climate change, biodiversity loss, and the gradual erosion of local cultures remind us that simply doing less harm may no longer be enough. The places we love need more than protection. Many of them need healing.

I don’t believe every destination has to look the same or follow a single model. Every landscape has its own ecology, culture, history, and challenges.

But I do believe every destination can ask a simple question:


Will this place be better because people came here?

If the answer becomes “yes”—not just for visitors, but for the land, the water, the wildlife, and the community—then tourism has the potential to become something much more meaningful.

That is the journey we have chosen at Kochattante Kolayi.

Not to build a destination that attracts the most visitors, but to help nurture a place that grows healthier, richer, and more resilient with every passing year.

Because perhaps the true measure of a destination is not how many people it welcomes, but how well it cares for the place that welcomes them.

Comments

  1. Good thought of developing such an eco system which will be benefited to nature n people. Congratulations

    ReplyDelete

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