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Latest Update: Thursday4/9/2008September, 2008, 09:35 AM Doha Time
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Increase in flower prices hits Onam celebrations

KOZHIKODE: The colourful and often intricate floral patterns called pookkalam, which are made at the entrances to homes in Kerala during the harvest festival of Onam, are a bit smaller this year due to a huge hike in the price of flowers.
Flower vendors attracted hundreds of customers yesterday but they bought only small quantities of flowers as prices have almost doubled since last year.
Rose was being sold for Rs160 per kg, while marigold and bachelor’s button cost Rs50 and Rs100 per kg respectively.
“The prices have skyrocketed this year. I have asked my children to make the pookkalam a little smaller,” a man said as he bought flowers from a shop here.
“When we were young there was no question of buying flowers from the market. We used to forage the neighbourhood for flowers. Now people have no time to go around and pick flowers, which are hard to come by anyway,” he said.
The flowers for Onam come mostly from the neighbouring states of Karnataka and Tamil Nadu. “The flowers you see here are from Mysore and Coimbatore. This time the prices have risen sharply,” said P S Mani, a flower merchant.
According to Mani, the Vinayaka Chathurthi festival yesterday was one reason for the price rise.
“The flower cultivating villages in Karnataka and Tamil Nadu themselves need flowers for the festival. So there is a shortage,” he said.
In Thrissur, the price did not come in the way for N K Sudhir and friends from laying a 20ft floral carpet at Thekkinkadu ground in front of the south gate of Vadakkumnatha Temple.
Meanwhile, with the Kerala government pumping in millions into Onam celebrations, a large number of foreign and domestic tourists are expected to arrive to witness the weeklong festivities beginning on September 10.
State Tourism Minister Kodiyeri Balakrishnan yesterday said many hotels had got good bookings.
“During the Onam season, domestic tourists outnumber foreign tourists simply because a large number of Malayalis settled outside the state make it a point to come back to celebrate the festival,” said Balakrishnan. – IANS

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