
Beaches
in Goa
Calangute Beach

16
Kms from Panaji. is the most popular holiday resort in Goa and known as The Queen
of Beaches. Excellent accommodation facilities are available, particularly at
the tourist resort and cottages. Calangute lie on the shores of the Arabian Sea
of North Goa in India. It is encircled by Arpora-Nagoa, Saligao and Candolim,
in the Bardez taluka.
Being a popular holiday resort, the small houses
amidst the coconut groves behind the beach are always in constant demand. Calangute
seems to be a distortion of the local vernacular wordKoli-gutti,
which means land of fishermen. Some people connect it with Kalyangutti (village
of art) or Konvallo-ghott (strong pit of the coconut tree) because the village
is full of coconut trees. With the advent of the Portuguese, the word probably
got distorted to Calangute, and has stuck till today.
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 poojas, 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.
The best time of the year
to visit this area is between September and March.
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