Beaches of Goa are much ahead of other beaches
in India in terms of popularity and the facilities that are
available here. The beaches here have been accepted as a matter of
life, there are exotic cuisine backing the pleasure of have on sun
and sand, and water sports facilities that include from water
scooters to water gliding. To add on you can shake your legs for
some time with a glass of feni and beer, engaged in shopping on the
beachside, or have midnight bonfire on the beach.
There are some more aspects of Goa beaches that attract tourists
every year. Whatsoever times you have visited these beaches they
tend to change their look and get new designs every new season.
These beaches refurbish themselves every new season and enhance the
excitement of visitors who are never tired of appreciating Goa. Out
of 125 km of coastline the beaches of Goa cover not less than 83 km
and there is one for you also waiting to be explored. Go and find
it!
Anjuna Beach
Anjuna was once the most celebrated of Goas many beaches, for
this is where the hippies would hang about. Their departure has done
nothing to rob the wide shelf of sand of its beauty, and almost
every visitor heads here, for it has gone on to become one of the
most photographed of beaches, which means, rightly, that youre
unlikely to find isolation here.
Arambol (Harmal)
Beach
The beach that is to the furthest north: Arambol also called
Harmal. The sand is soft and white, there are cottages on the red
laterite slopes, rocks in some places, a freshwater pond, and the
approach road is lined with shacks offering souvenirs and clothes.
At one end of it runs the Tiracol River and beyond rises the Tiracol
Fort, now an interesting little hotel.
Baga Beach
Baga lies between Anjuna and Calangute. Where Anjuna is in the
north and Calangute is on the south. Baga is also termed as the
extension of Calangute. It is difficult to make out where one ends
and the other begins. Baga is a comparatively clean beach.
Benaulim Beach
Benaulim, is relatively undiscovered by domestic tourists even
though it is a fishing beach. However, it gets fairly crowded during
weekends and evenings with local visitors who get off buses about a
kilometer away and pour onto the beach. The breaking wave height
here is half a meter and the slope is 1 in 30 in September.
Bogmolo Beach
The last southern beach before you get to Panaji is the first
southern beach to be discovered by visitors: Bogmolo. This broad
beach, backed by palms, is now shared by visitors and fishermen
alike. Youd find bathers relaxing on sun beds under bright
beach umbrellas. Bogmolo is considered a safe beach for swimmers.
Calangute Beach
Calangute was the first hippie beach resort at the height of the
Flower Children era. The successors to these dropouts have moved on
as domestic tourist moved in and converted Calangute into a
paddling, snacking, shopping, picnicking, vacationing beach.
Colva Beach
Colva is on the northern end of this long, continuous strip of
coastline. Its broad and beautiful, has a stream coursing
through it and is backed by palms. Sadly, its beauty has made it
popular and its popularity has cheapened it: its off-beach shops and
restaurants, brightly lit and crowded, give it the feel of a funfair
rather than a serene, unwinding beach. This is essentially our
domestic tourists paddling beach.
Dona Paula Bech
On the other side of this headland is the little bay and tiny beach
of Dona Paula. Water scooters and speedboats buzz across the bay
and, at the drop of a hat; guides will embroider on the woeful tale
of a star-crossed maiden who fell in love with a handsome man below
her status. Conventions could not be breached in those distant days
and so she leapt into the sea and to her death.
Palolem Beach
The Southern coast of Goa is stretched by white sand. Until a few
years back, it was among the virgin beaches of Goa. However, it
couldn't escape from the eyes of the tourists. Although a few
developments have taken place, the beach still has a soothing aura
to it.
Vagator Beach
Vagator is a popular beach with the tour operators. However, a
little further south of this main beach is a more sedate beach known
as 'Little Vagator' or Ozran beach. This beach accommodates a fresh
water pool. Little Vagator also has a number of good eating places.
Other Beaches in Goa
Mabor Beach
Mabor beach is very beautiful, very clean and, in spite of warning
notices put up by a luxury beach hotel, it is a public beach. All
beaches in India are public beaches. Private enterprise has,
however, responded well to the needs of visitors: there are beach
umbrellas and chairs and tourists happily broiling themselves in the
Goan sun.
Varca Beach
Though Mabor, Cavelossim, and the next three beaches are really a
single strand, they are treated as separate beaches because of the
villages they were once associated with. Thus the next one north,
Varca, may in time develop a character of its own. For the present,
its really an extension of the others. It does, however, have
deep rows of casuarinas and is long, clean, and quite lonely.
Majorda Beach
The sands of Majorda, next on your northern drive to Panaji, are
not as white as those of Colva but it is popular in a slightly more
up-market way. Here people relax under beach umbrellas and recline
on pool chairs. There are shacks backed by stands of screw pines and
palms and a small stream lost itself in a puddle patronized by
flocks of white gulls.
Miramar
(Gaspar Dias) Beach
Panajis beach, Miramar or Gaspar Dias, is 3 km from the city
center and spreads beyond a small forest of casuarinas. This is a
popular beach with joggers, strollers, children, and careful
paddlers. However, it is not considered safe for swimmers.
Aguada Beach
Driving out of the capital, heading north along the coast, you come
across the famed Aguada beach dominated by the battlements of the
Old Portuguese Fort Aguada. A luxury hotel spreads here with its
more informal clone, the Taj Village, clustering at its feet. Its
a good, clean, swimmers beach popular with well-heeled
tourists. It is also at the southern end of a very long stretch of
beach that goes all the way up to the mouth of the Baga River. Here,
too, as in the case of many of the southern beaches, individual
segments of this extensive strand have been given separate
identities associated with the villages that lie behind them. Their
names sound like the strumming of a Goan guitar: Sinquerim,
Candolim, Calangute and Baga.
Sinquerim Beach
Sinquerim is popular with foreign visitors because its broad
and not very crowded. One reason why domestic tourists seem to be
wary of this beach is possibly that its foreshore slope is a steep 1
in 10.
Candolim Beach
Candolim is more popular than Sinquerim. Its immediate hinterland
gives you the quietly disciplined feel of a coastal village in
Spain: warm, friendly, and happy to mind its own business. Its
foreshore slope is the same as Sinquerim and the waves break at a
meter.


