Goa’s 105-km-long coastline is an almost contiguous stretch of beach, interrupted occasionally by tree-covered cliffs
Palolem-Patnem-Galgibaga-Polem
When I visited Palolem in August, just one beachside guesthouse was functioning on this lovely crescent-shaped beach and there were exactly two other tourists. Dogs yapped about on the sand, cows lounged around and a handful of locals sat and stared at me. This time around I found a string of beach shacks and huts hugging the outer edge of the beach. At night, candlelit tables spilled out onto the beach. Tourists sat alone in silence watching the waves or were sprawled around in small groups talking quietly. There are live music performances, mostly by tourists who move from beach to beach earning their board by performing at these shacks. The huts at Palolem (starting at Rs 400 for basic single-room huts with common showers and loos) are mostly flimsy and the food unremarkable. In the morning the tables on the beach disappear to make way for motorised fishermen’s boats that do no fishing but instead take tourists for dolphin-spotting rides (Rs 150 onwards). Santosh Pagi (98812-99998) is just one of the many boat operators who will try to entice you with boat rides into the sunset or sunrise.
Palolem is the southernmost of Goa’s ‘developed’ beaches. This is a good base to see the other quieter beaches further south, such as Polem, located close to the Goa-Karnataka border. I visited this short beach, bounded by two low cliffs, early one morning as the village, hidden among the palm trees at the edge of the beach, slowly roused itself. A lone boat was out at sea and an old woman sat cleaning wooden boards waiting for the boat to return with the day’s catch. I found a small teashop with a room at the rear that is sometimes let out to tourists (Rs 200; 0832-2640145). The teashop owner, Laxman, told us of his plans to start boat trips in April to a nearby island. But right now there’s only the cawing of crows to distract you from the gentle sea.
More or less midway between Palolem and Polem is Galgibaga, one of Goa’s two turtle nesting sites. There are no tourist facilities here; the beach, though, is clean and long. For a bit more action go to Palolem’s sister beach, Patnem. The beach huts here are fewer compared to Palolem but are sturdier. Patnem also has a bit of watersports activity: kayaks can be hired by the hour at Tantra Café (from Rs 150; 9923488491). Or you could go sailing with an instructor on Goa Sailing’s Prindle 15’ catamaran (from Rs 750; 9850458865, www.goasailing.com).
Agonda-Cola
Roughly 10km north of Palolem is Agonda. On the road parallel to the beach are the Dunhill Beach Resort and Dercy’s Hotel. On the beach are a few huts, all pretty sturdy, each set cordoned off by wooden fencing. The best of the lot is the Mahanamahnas (from Rs 1,000; 264-7864, www.agondabeach.com). The double-storeyed white and blue huts, called ‘tree houses’ for some reason, each have a hall and wash area on the ground floor and a sleeping area on the first. The large balconies strewn with hammocks and chairs are attractive. Few tourists come to this three-kilometre-long beach and those who do are looking for solitude. Further north is Cola. You need to drive down a dirt track that drops sharply down towards the sea. After this spine-cracking drive, walk down for a few minutes till you reach the secluded cove with a strip of beach. You can spend days and nights almost undisturbed contemplating the meaning of life here. The Blue Lagoon Paradise Resort (Rs 1,000 for tents and Rs 800 for huts; 2647842) is Cola’s only place to stay. More camp than resort, it’s located just above the beach.
Colva-Sernabatim-Benaulim
Colva, located just 6km from Margao, is a busy little town with a multitude of hotels, restaurants and chic stores. The beach is a typical Indian beach, crowded with families and extremely noisy. The tourists here are mostly Indian too — clinging honeymooners, families with infants, children running wild on the beach and grandparents flopped about. You will also find packs of young men, stripped to their undies, whooping and screaming and ogling at women. Stay clear of them and Colva is a fun place — it’s Goa’s best beach for watersports. There’s parasailing, water-scooter rides, banana-boat rides, motorboat rides and speedboat rides. Rides start at Rs 400 per person. The best time to try the rides is late afternoon and early evening. If you can watch the sun go down with equanimity while hanging from a parachute attached to a zigzagging speedboat, go for it. There are no beach huts at Colva, but there are several hotels close to the beach. Longuinhos (Rs 2,200-3,000; 2788068-69, www.longuinhos.net) is among the best. A cheaper option is Vailankanni Cottages (Rs 500; 2788584) with plain but clean rooms. The road leading to the beach has a number of restaurants, most of them with live bands and overflowing with patrons. But eat at the beach shacks. The seafood is fresh and the Goan fish curry rice very good.
Colva, Sernabatim and Benaulim are together really a single long stretch of beach with three separate entry points. Colva is the star, and Benaulim and Sernabatim the supporting cast. The Taj Exotica lurks at the southern end of Benaulim and the main stretch of beach has a few shacks. Here you will find Pedro’s and Johncy’s, both popular restaurants. Pedro’s (9822389177) also organises boat rides. Sernabatim, in the middle, is the most tranquil of the three.
No beach shacks here, just one teashop with a Kannadiga making Malabari parottas for breakfast. Stay on the beach at Furtado’s Beach House (from Rs 1,500; 2770396).
Calangute-Baga-Sinquerim-Candolim
Calangute (48km from Dabolim airport) in the north is similar to Colva. Here too you’ll find large families shrieking in the water. And this too is a good spot for parasailing, water-scooter rides and motorboat rides. Beach shacks serve the typical shack mix of North Indian, Continental, Chinese and Goan dishes. But move on from Calangute quickly, as just to the north is Baga. Until a few years back Baga was the sleepy backwater of Calangute, but now it is slowly edging out the ‘Queen’ of Goa’s beaches. The beach is much better here and ends at the Baga river. By day it is crowded with families trying out the water rides. By night the beach shacks, more sophisticated than others, are packed to the gills. But the action is not limited to the beach: the area around Baga is a busy hive of activity, with designer stores, restaurants and nightclubs. The famous Tito’s and Café Mambo are here and are still very happening. Ingo’s Saturday night market is also close by at Arpora. I missed it, but was told that it is more exciting than Anjuna’s popular Wednesday-night flea market. Homes near the beach let out rooms from Rs 500. Ask at the beach shacks, they’ll take you to the homes. An upmarket option is La Calypso Beach Resort (2275777, www.lacalypsohotels.in), which has huts for Rs 7,000 in the peak season.
Candolim and Sinquerim are located just south of Calangute. Candolim’s beach is long and crowded with shacks and tourists. Taj’s Fort Aguada, Hermitage and Holiday Village overlook Sinquerim. But the beach has almost disappeared. Nevertheless there are some watersports options, notably water-scooter rides for Rs 200 upwards. On the road to Sinquerim is the charmingly old- orld Ludovici Tourist Home (Rs 840 with breakfast; 2479684), a villa set in a large garden. The four rooms that are let out are all large and airy.
Anjuna-Vagator-Mandrem-Ashwem-Morjim-Arambol-Keri
Anjuna and Vagator are to the north of Baga. Both have attracted backpackers and anyone wishing to let their dreadlocks down. Both wear a jaded air. The stalls that line the street leading to Anjuna’s beach still sell junk jewellery, psychedelic T-shirts and mirrorwork cushion covers. Among the stalls are guesthouses letting out cheap rooms. Both beaches resolutely cling to their ‘party capital’ tag but the music these days stops at 10pm. Curly’s Bar at the south end of Anjuna organises parties in season. Paradiso, one of Goa’s most popular nightclubs, sits atop a cliff near Anjuna beach. Beach shacks like Boom Shankar will have information on the beach parties at Vagator. Nine Bar, above the beach, is for trance lovers. Today’s generation of hippies have moved up — north to Arambol. The quieter beaches of Mandrem, Ashwem and Morjim (Goa’s other turtle-nesting site) lie between Vagator and Arambol. All three have cheap huts and guesthouses. Ashwem’s Rock Bite Huts and Restaurant (Rs 1,000 in peak season; 2247671) has good huts on the beach.
Israelis on their post-draft break favour Arambol and often stay for months. There are stalls for fixing dreadlocks, Internet cafés with Hebrew keyboards and restaurant after open-air restaurant serving Israeli, Bulgarian and every other kind of European food. Beach huts don’t get more basic or cheap than the ones at Arambol. Almost none has an attached bath; the huts are priced from Rs 300 in peak season. The atmosphere is laid-back and every jam session threatens to turn into a full-blown party.
Keri is the northernmost of Goa’s beaches. This quiet strand, just a hop, skip and jump from Tiracol Fort, remains unsullied, as the hordes do not venture this far north. Village homes let out rooms from Rs 200. Entire homes are also available for around Rs 15,000 a month.
The Rest Cavelossim, Rajbaga, Majorda, Utardo and Varca are essentially resort beaches. All beautiful, they have been claimed by one five-star hotel or another. Unless you are staying at these resorts, the beaches hold little for the visitor. Velsao, south of Vasco and 4km from Verna, is an ‘undeveloped’ beach with just a couple of sand-floored beach shacks. The only excitement you’ll find here are the fishing boats bringing in their catch each morning. The storybook sleepy village of Velsao is a good place to walk around. The only place to stay here is the Horizon Beach Resort (from Rs 2,500; 2754923/24, www.horizonbeachresortgoa.com).
Bogmalo and Miramar are respectively Vasco’s and Panaji’s beaches. Both are pretty, but go here only if you are staying in these cities, as nothing much happens here. Of the two Bogmalo has more beach action, with a couple of beachside restaurants, including the incomparable Joet’s (2538072). Two diving companies are based on these beaches. Barracuda Diving (6656294, www.barracudadiving.com) is at Miramar, while Goa Diving (2538204, www.goadiving.com) is at Bogmalo.
Beach-hopping might sound like a grand idea, but will likely only result in beach fatigue. My advice: pick one beach — don’t say you don’t know how to choose now — and spend a few days there. Watch the sunrise from a sun bed on the sands, eat a breakfast of choriso-pao, read a book and relax, watch the sunset from a fishing boat in the evening, eat fish curry rice at a beach shack for dinner, and finally come back and wait for the sun to rise again on another day at the beach.
Tips
Stay at a beach hut for the ultimate beach experience. You need not book these temporary huts on the beach in advance, as you’ll easily find accommodation except at the year-end. Walk around the beach of your choice, investigate a few huts and negotiate the price. Owners reduce rates for longer stays. The best shacks are in Agonda and the cheapest at Arambol.
Eat at beach shacks. These have affordable, good food. The seafood is excellent. Sticking to Goan dishes is wise.
Remember that Goa has two tariffs for everything — one for foreigners and alower ratefor Indians. Incidentally, no prejudice against Indians was on display. Stall owners and other operators welcome Indians and even cheerfully lower rates. But bargain!