Goa Beaches
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MIRAMAR BEACH
On the way to Dona Paula, 1-km ahead of the confluence of the Arabian Sea and
Mandvi River, under the palm shade, is "Gasper Dias" or Miramar Beach
and is just 3-km away from the capital city of Panjim.
In Portuguese language 'Miramar' stand for viewing the sea. Situated on a good
location for evening walks, the coast is spread upto 2-km, having a fine silvery
sand bed. From here one has an excellent view of the Aguada fort just across
the Mandovi River.
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» VAGATOR BEACH

Barely
a couple of kilometres of cliff tops and parched grassland separate Anjuna from
the southern fringes of its nearest neighbour, Vagator. Yet to be disturbed
by the hustle and bustle of tourists, life goes on peacefully, in the background,
in Vagator and Chapora. It is cool rural area, without offering the tourist
any big shopping complexes.
A desultory collection of ramshackle farmhouses and picturesque old Portuguese
bungalows scattered around a network of leafy lanes, the 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.
For better, then, to head to the next cove south. Backed by a steep wall of
crumbling palm-fringed laterite, Ozran Vagator beach is more secluded and much
less accessible than either of its neighbours. To get there, walk ten minutes
from Big Vagator, or drive to the end of the lane off the main Chapora-Anjuna
Road, from where a footpath drops sharply down to a wide stretch of level white
sand.
At this southern end of the beach, a row of makeshift cafes provides shade and
sustenance for a predominantly Israeli crowd. Like Anjuna, Vagator is a relaxed,
comparatively undeveloped resort that appeals, in the main, to budget travellers
with time on their hands. Accommodation is limited, however, and visitors frequently
find themselves travelling to and from Baga every day to find a suitable place
to stay.
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» Palolem BEACH

Palolem
pops up, as a favourite beach destination in Goa because its crescent shaped
bay lined with a swaying curtain of coconut palms, is irresistibly photogenic.
Frem accommodation point of view, there are beautiful beach huts and family
room to choose from in Palolem.
Palolem, 2-km 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 hug boulders
to the spur of Sahyadri Ghat, which here tapers into the sea.
Until recently foreign tourists were few and far between in Palolem. Over the
past five or six years, however, increasing numbers of budget travellers have
begun to find their way here, 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 beachfront.
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. In spite
of these encroachments, Palolem remains a resolutely traditional village, where
the easy pace of life is dictated more by the three daily rounds of Todi (also
spelt as Toddy) tapping than the exigencies of tourism.
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