This is a small Portuguese enclave with India's most dazzling tourist mosaics. It is also called "THE PEARL OF EAST". Its name is derived from the word "GOYAN" which means the patch of tall grass. It is associated with old Portuguese architecture with distinct flavor of lifestyle. It is full of beaches pristine beauty of seascape, its mystical hills, the rhythmic pounding of sea, its swaying palms-all make it a fairy- tale land of travelers. Goa is where the water-babies thrive. It is the most preferred beach destination in India for many good reasons. Beautiful sandy beaches, a delightful laissez faire attitude, quaint homes and old churches in the Portuguese tradition (Goa was a Portuguese colony for 450 years), lovely country sides, abundant seafood, plenty of accommodation in all categories. By air Goa is well connected with Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Madras & Cochin.
|
| Anjuna |
Anjuna attracts a weird and wonderful collection of over Landers, monks, defiant ex-hippies, gentle lunatics, artists, artisans, seers, searchers, sybarites and itinerant expatriates who normally wouldn't be seen out of the organic confines of their health-food emporia in San Francisco or London. It's famous throughout Goa for its Wednesday flea market, and has retained an undeniable, if somewhat shabby, charm. This is a good place to stick around for a while, make some friends and engage in mellow contemplation while the sun goes down. Full moon, when the infamous parties take place, is a particularly good time to be here if you want to indulge in bacchanalian delights. Only a Brit would think about raving about the main beach, but it's worth the walk to the small, protected sliver of sand at South Anjuna where the area's long-term house-renters tend to gather.
| Location |
18 km away from Panaji. |
| Distance |
47 km from Dabolim |
| STD Code |
0832 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has a consistent climate throughout the year with just meager fluctuations in the temperature. December and January might require light woolens, but April and May are warm. The period from June to October brings heavy rain, almost up to 320 cm. The temperature during the summers ranges from 24°C to 32.7°C and during the winters it ranges from 21.3°C to 32.2°C.
|
| Entertainment |
Swimming,Surfing,Sunbath,Boating |
| How to Reach |
Air: The nearest airport is at Dabolim, which is 29 km away from Panaji and 47 km from Anjuna
Rail:The nearest railway station is at Karmali 11 km away from Panaji and 29 km from Anjuna.
Road: There are buses every hour to Anjuna from Mapusa (8 km). For tourists arriving from Mumbai, Mapusa is the jumping-off point for the northern beaches. There are frequent local buses to Panaji, which is just 18 km away. One can also hire a motorcycle or a taxi from Mapusa to reach Anjuna. |
Top
|
| Arambol |
 |
Some years ago, when the screws were tightened at Anjuna in an attempt to control what local people regarded as the more outrageous activities (nudism and drug use) of a certain section of the travelling community, the die-hards cast around for a more sympathetic' beach. Arambol, north of Chapora, was one of those which they choose. Initially, only those willing to put up with very primitive conditions came here. Things are a little more comfortable these days, but development has, so far, been minimal. |
The village remains tranquil and friendly - just a few hundred locals, mostly fishing people, and a couple of hundred Western residents in the November to February high season. The coastline lacks the palm-fringed exotic cliches of the southern Goa beaches but it has plenty of character and is pretty in its own kind of way. The main beach has adequate bodysurfing and there are several attractive bays a short walk to the north. Beyond an idyllic, rocky-bottomed cove, the trail emerges to a board strip of soft white sand hemmed in on both sides by steep cliffs. Behind it, a small freshwater lake extends along the bottom of the valley into a thick jungle.
Fed by boiling hot springs, the lake is lined with sulphurous mud, which, smeared over the body, dries to form a surreal, butter-coloured shell. The resident hippies swear it's good for you and spend much of the day tiptoeing naked around the shallow like refugees from some obscure tribal initiation ceremony - much to the amusement of Arambol's Indian visitors.
|
| Location |
50 km north of Panaji |
| Distance |
Dabolim 80kms |
| STD Code |
0832 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has a consistent climate throughout the year with just meager fluctuations in the temperature. December and January might require light woolens, but April and May are warm. The period from June to October brings heavy rain, almost up to 320 cm. The temperature during the summers ranges from 24°C to 32.7°C and during the winters it ranges from 21.3°C to 32.2°C. |
| Entertainment |
Fishing,Swimming,Boating |
| How to Reach |
Air : Goa's international airport, Dabolim, is 29 km from the capital Panaji. Indian Airlines has direct flights from Delhi, Mumbai and Chennai daily.
Rail : Goa's two main stations are at Margao and Vasco da Gama. Vasco-da-Gama and Margoa are connected by train with Bangalore, Belgaum, Hospet and Hyderabad and via Miraj to Bombay, Delhi and Agra.
Road: Goa is well connected by NH17A with Maharashtra and Karnataka state. There are regular bus services to Mumbai, Bangalore, Hampi and other destinations from the Kadamba bus stand at Panaji. There are buses available to and fro between Panjim and Arambol every thirty minutes until noon, and every ninety minutes thereafter and between Mapusa and Arambol which takes three hours. |
Top
|
Bogmalo |
Immediately south of the airport, the Mormugao peninsula's sun-parched central plateau tumbles to a flat-bottomed valley lined with coconut trees and red-brick huts. The sandy beach at the end of the cove is even more picturesque. Bogmalo was just another small fishing village, hemmed in by a pair of plate with a tiny whitewashed chapel. Pricey café-bars have crept up the beach, while the clearing below the hotel is prowled by assiduous Kashmiri handicraft vendors. The beach is clean and not too crowded, the water reasonably safe for swimming, and there are plenty of places to eat, drink and shop at Bogmalo. |
 |
Bogmalo beach in Goa comes as a very important Goa beach because it is situated very close to the airport. This beach in Goa is home to the five-star Park, a Bogmalo beach resort.
This beach in Goa is very pleasant and sports an air of tranquility. The Bogmalo beach resort is an apt place to stay during a tourist's beach holiday to Bogmalo but it may come as expensive to many. In order to cater to those who may be on a beach vacation to Goa on a shoestring budget, there are cheap hotels or guesthouses.
But as most of the beach hotels at Bogmalo operate through travel agencies, they are often booked. So it is always ideal that you do advance booking while planning a beach vacation to Goa.
This Goa beach has an array of eating joints that offer delicious Goan food accompanied by the ever-famous Goan drink Feni.
As far as reaching Bogmalo beach in Goa is concerned, there are bus services, however they are irregular. You can hire taxis or bikes instead which makes the beach trip comfortable. |
| Location |
Vasco da Gama which is 8km from Bogmalo. |
| Distance |
beach is about 18 km from Dabolim Airport |
| STD Code |
0834 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has an equable climate with little variation in the average minimum and maximum temperatures. During the summer (April to June) the minimum temperature is 26°C and the maximum is 34°C. The monsoon (July to October) brings temperatures down marginally to 24°C and the maximum temperature down to 31°C. In winter from November to March the minimum is 21°C, while the maximum is 32°C. |
| Entertainment |
Fishing,swimming,Boating |
| How to Reach |
Air: 3-4 km from Dabolim airport
Rail: Goa's two main stations are at Margao and Vasco da Gama. Vasco-da-Gama and Margoa are connected by train with Bangalore, Belgaum, Hospet and Hyderabad and via Miraj to Bombay, Delhi and Agra.
Road:Frequent buses run between Bogmala and Vasco. Catch the bus for Margao and Panaji from there |
Top
|
| Calangute & Baga |
Seemingly not all that long ago, Calangute was the beach all self-respecting hippies headed for, especially around Christmas when psychedelic hell broke loose. If you enjoyed taking part in those mass pujas, with their endless half-baked discussions about `when the revolution comes' and `the vibes, maaan', then this was just the ticket. You could frolic around without a stitch on, be ever so cool and liberated, get totally out of your head on every conceivable variety of ganja from Timor to Tenochtitlan and completely disregard the feelings of the local inhabitants. Naturally, John Lennon or The Who were always about to turn up and give a free concert.
Calangute's heyday as the Mecca of all expatriate hippies has passed. The local people, who used to rent out rooms in their houses for a pittance, have moved on to more profitable things, and Calangute has undergone a metamorphosis to become the centre of Goa's rapidly expanding package-tourist market. It isn't one of the best Goanese beaches: there are hardly any palms, the sand is contaminated with red soil and the beach drops rapidly into the sea. There is, however, plenty going on, especially if you don't mind playing a minor role in this stage-managed parody of what travelling is meant to be about. Try heading off the beaten track unless you need a bit of R 'n' R to recover from life on the road, or want to mix it with the Simons and Sandras of this world who are visiting India to pep up their winter suntans.
Baga, 10km west of Mapusa, is basically an extension of Calangute; not even the locals agree where one ends and the other begins. Lying in the lee of a rocky, wooded headland, the only difference is that the scenery here is marginally more varied and picturesque.
| Location |
Calangute and Baga lie on the shores of the Arabian Sea of North Goa in India. |
| Distance |
29 km away from Panaji |
| STD Code |
0832 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has a consistent climate through the year with only meager fluctuations in the temperature. December and January might require light woolens. April and May are warm. The period from June to October brings heavy rain, almost up to 320 cm. The temperature during summers ranges from 24°C to 32.7°C and during winters, from 21.3°C to 32.2°C. |
| Entertainment |
Motorcycle Renting,Water Sports,Crocodile And Dolphin Spotting Tours |
| How to Reach |
Air:The nearest airport is at Dabolim, which is 29 km away from Panaji. Panaji is just half an hour’s drive away from Calangute.
Rail: The nearest railway station is at Karmali 11 km away from Panaji. Panaji is just half an hour’s drive away from Calangute.
Road:Calangute Beach is about ten minutes from Mapusa, and thirty minutes from the state capital, Panaji. There are frequent buses to Panaji and Mapusa from Calangute. Most buses from Panaji terminate at Calangute and a few trudge further on up to Baga. Mapusa is 8 km away from Calangute. |
Top
|
| Colva |
 |
A hot-season retreat for Margao's moneyed middle classes since long before Independence, Colva is the oldest and largest - of south Goa's resorts. Its leafy outlying vaddos, or wards, are pleasant enough, dotted with colonial lection of concrete hotels, souvenir stalls and fly-blown snack bars strewn around a bleak central roundabout. Colva is pleasant and convenient place to stay, swimming is relatively safe, while the sand, at least away from the beachfront, is spotless and scattered with beautiful shells. |
| The Colva Beach is broad and beautiful, and has a stream coursing through it. Colva is the oldest and largest of South Goa's resorts. Its leafy outlying 'Vaddos', or wards are pleasant enough, dotted with colonial style villas and ramshackle fishing huts. The beachfront is a collection of concrete hotels, souvenir stalls and fly blown snack bars strewn around a central roundabout. |
| Location |
Colva is a small village in south Goa on the shores of the Arabian Sea. |
| Distance |
It lies 39 km away from Panaji |
| STD Code |
0834 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has a consistent climate through the year with just meager fluctuations in the temperature. December and January might require light woolens. April and May are warm. The period from June to October brings heavy rain, almost up to 400 cm. The temperature during the summers ranges from 24°C to 32.7°C and during the winters it ranges from 21.3°C to 32.2°C. |
| Entertainment |
The Beach Bonanza ,Fama of Menino Jesuse (Child Jesus) |
| How to Reach |
Air: The nearest airport is at Dabolim, which is 29 km away from Panaji and 68 km from Colva.
Rail: The nearest railway station is at Karmali, 11 km away from Panaji. Panaji is 39 km away from Colva.
Road: There are frequent buses from Colva running to and from Margao (also Madgaon; 6 km away) from where one can take a bus to Panaji, which is 33 km further ahead. |
Top
|
| Miramar & Dona Paula |
West of Panjim, the coast road passes through the swish suburb of Campal, with its grand colonial residences, before swinging south towards the beach at Miramar. Were this anywhere but Goa, you might be tempted to spend an afternoon here, enjoying the two-kilometer, sweep of dark sand and the views across Aguada Bay.
The same is true of nearby Dona Paula, 9km west of Panjim. Nestled on the south side of the rocky, hammer-shaped headland that divides the Zuari and Mandovi estuaries, this former fishing village is nowadays a commercialized resort. |
 |
There are two versions of the love story that attaches itself to this so-called Lovers Paradise. One is that a Viceroy's daughter jumped off the cliff here as her family objected to her love affair. Another version says that she was pushed off the cliff as a punishment of captivating Francisco de Tavora, the Count of Alvor with her charms. It is said that she has been seen emerging from moonlit waves wearing only a pearl necklace. |
| Location |
Seven kilometers west of the Indian state of Goa’s capital Panajim (Panaji) |
| Distance |
36 km from Anjuna. |
| STD Code |
0834 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
The climate is equable and moist throughout the year. While it is pleasant and temperate from October to May it is rainy from June to September. Temperature variations throughout the year are mild. May is the warmest month with a temperature of around 30°C and January is coolest with a mean daily temperature of 25°C. Due to its proximity of the sea, the territory is generally humid and even during the summer months humidity is generally above 60 percent. |
| Entertainment |
Water Sports,National Oceanography Institute,Cabo Raj Niwas. |
| How to Reach |
Air: The nearest airport is at Dabolim, which is 29 km away from Panaji and 36 km from Anjuna.
Rail:Goa is connected with Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Mangalore, and Thiruvananthapuram by train. The nearest railway station is at Karmali, which is 15 km from the beach.
Road:The Dona Paula Beach is well connected by road. Seven kilometers from the capital city, regular bus and taxi services are easily available. The Kadamba Transport Corporation (Government of Goa Undertaking), and Maharashtra and Karnataka State Road Transport Corporations operate buses from and to Goa. |
Top
|
| Palolem |
2km west of Chaudi, pops up more often in glossy holiday brochures than any other beach in Goa; not because the village is a major package tour destination, but because its crescent-shaped bay, lined with a swaying curtain of coconut palms, is irresistibly photogenic. Hemmed in by a pair of wooded headlands, a perfect curve of white sand arcs north from a pile of huge boulders to the spur of Sahyadri Ghat, which here tapers into the sea.
Over the past three three or four years, however, increasing numbers of budget travellers have begun to pour in, and the village is now far from the undiscovered idyll it used to be, with a string of cafes, Karnatakan hawkers and a tent camp crowding the beach front. Souvenir stalls have also sprung up, catering mainly for the mini-van and boat parties of charter tourists on day-trips from resorts further north.
| Location |
2km west of Chaudi |
| Distance |
Dabolim 67kms. |
| STD Code |
0832 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
The climate is equable and moist throughout the year. While it is pleasant and temperate from October to May it is rainy from June to September. Temperature variations throughout the year are mild. May is the warmest month with a temperature of around 30°C and January is coolest with a mean daily temperature of 25°C. Due to its proximity of the sea, the territory is generally humid and even during the summer months humidity is generally above 60 percent. |
| Entertainment |
Swimming, Boating,Fishing |
| How to Reach |
Air: Nearest Airport is Dabolim 67kms.
Rail:
Nearest Railway station is Canacona 10kms.
Road:
You can hire taxis and auto-rickshaws to reach Palolem beach from Margao, 40 km away. There are regular buses from Margao to Palolem that would drop you at Canacona village. |
Top
|
Chapora & Vagator |
 |
This is one of the most interesting parts of Goa's coastline, and a good deal more attractive than Anjuna for either a short or a long stay. Much of the inhabited area nestles under a canopy of dense coconut palms, and Chapora village is more reminiscent of a charmingly unruly farmyard than a fishing community doubling as a beach resort. The village is dominated by a rocky hill topped by the remains of a fairly well-preserved Portuguese fort and the estuary of the Chapora River. There are sandy coves, pleasant beaches and rocky cliffs at nearby Vagator. |
Be prepared for Indian coach tourists coming to ogle sunbathing Westerners, and expect any police you encounter to regard you with some suspicion and shake you down for drugs if you mistakenly tell them you're staying at Chapora.
Vagator is a desultory collection of ramshackle farmhouses and picturesque old Portuguese bungalows scattered around a network of leafy lanes. This village is entered at the east via a branch off the Mapusa Road, which passes a few small guesthouses and restaurants before running down to the sea. Dominated by the red ramparts of Chapora Fort, Vagator's broad white sandy beach - Big Vagator Beach also known, as "Little Vagator" is undeniably beautiful, just like a picture postcard. |
| Location |
Located in North Goa |
| Distance |
24 km from Panaji |
| STD Code |
0832 |
| Language |
Konkani,Hindi,English |
| Climate / best Season/ Best Time To Visit |
Goa has a consistent climate through the year with just meager fluctuations in the temperature. December and January might require light woolens. April and May are warm. The period from June to October brings heavy rain, almost up to 400 cm. The temperature during the summers ranges from 24°C to 32.7°C and during the winters it ranges from 21.3°C to 32.2°C. |
| Entertainment |
Swimming,Boating,Surffing |
| How to Reach |
Air: The nearest airport is at Dabolim, which is 29 km away from Panaji. Panaji is just 22 km away from Vagator.
Rail:Nearest Railway station is Margoa
Road: Vagator is at a distance of 9 km from Mapusa, and 22 km far from the state capital Panaji. There are frequent buses to Panaji and Mapusa from Vagator. |
Top
|
|