Mallampuram
We took the mini-bus up the coast to Mallampuram which is as a UNESCO World heritige site, the hotel is located on the main street and was increadibly dust when we arrived due to the fact that they were resurfacing it during the night and a man was using a compressor to air blow the dust away before laying the new tarmac. We checked in to the hotel and went of in search of a restaurant and found – Moonrakers which for some odd reason (in the middle of southern India) was basing it's self on the contra-band smugglers of Southern England! The food was good and we retired back to the room to avail ourselves of the Wifi – first of this trip.
The next day we took bikes out to ride out to the various UNESCO sites which are built in the Neolithic style ( the temples were literally carved out of a single rick down in to the rock and ground rather than by building up. The Second Temple had been built by placing stones in the traditional style of building and was on the coast. Amazingly this survived the tsunami that swept though the coast in 2004. The other stone work we visited was the bas-relief carvings depicting the Hindu gods and stories.
The next day we took bikes out to ride out to the various UNESCO sites which are built in the Neolithic style ( the temples were literally carved out of a single rick down in to the rock and ground rather than by building up. The Second Temple had been built by placing stones in the traditional style of building and was on the coast. Amazingly this survived the tsunami that swept though the coast in 2004. The other stone work we visited was the bas-relief carvings depicting the Hindu gods and stories.
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