Travel to Goa
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Goa - Arambol Beach
Goa Sun, Sand, Sea....
Arambol Beach
A unique beach in the North
Goa, it is both rocky and sandy, beach and much sought after by foreign
tourists. It has a sweet water tank right on the shore. Along the Goa border is
Arambol with its fresh water lagoon. Due to its isolation, not many tourists
have been able to reach this beach. The 16-km-long sea beach along with the Goa
border is Arambol with its fresh water lagoon. 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.
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 traveling 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 clinches of
the southern Goa beaches but it has plenty of character and is pretty in its own
kind of way.
At one time, Arambol was the most backward village economically, with farming
and horticulture as its backbone, but today, it has captured a place on the
international map of tourism. Believe it or not, the local barbers have
disappeared from this village, but one finds a barber who has come all the way
from Kerala or Andhra Pradesh to settle down in this village. Kashmiris have set
up their shops, Punjabis run restaurants and fast-food joints, Maharashtrians
operate regular tours, while half-a-dozen hotels are under construction by
entrepreneurs from Bangalore, Mumbai and New Delhi, realising that the sea beach
has assumed great importance in the global village.
Best Time to Visit : -
Arambol is one such
centre of attraction, where one can see a mini-India, where people are looking
for comfort and pleasure during the tourist season which starts in October with
pleasant weather. |
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