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Travel Guide » Asia » Tiracol
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Tiracol
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(Goa)


Crowing Glory

The curves of Insuli, the last up-and-down ghat to cross before you enter Goa, are a gentle wake-up call, a warning that misty-smoky Pernem is just around a few more corners and you'd better be awake to catch your first glimpse. When the coconut palms lining the road take on a glossier sheen and bend down to pay obeisance to silver rivers, you know you are in Goa.

Pernem's beauty appears like a breath of fresh, early morning air. Despite the long journey, there's a spring in your step as you make your way to the coast, and you just can't help but feel excited. After all, this is Goa, whose very earth seems richer and redder than anywhere else in the Konkan, earth which smells so nutty and sweet in the rains. Where every second step is a waiting glass of golden feni. This is Goa, where all guards can be lowered, all caution thrown to the winds, all the senses set free to discover each curve of her sensuous temples. This is Goa, where for every hotelier who hangs a sign on his door warning, foreigners only, there're a hundred smiling faces wishing you a happy holiday. And may you always return.
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Getting There
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To See & Do
Start with a tour of Goa?s crowning glory the imperious Tiracol Fort on the northern bank of the Arondem River before you make your way down Pernem's Gold Coast, or to the interior.

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Tiracol Tour
  It?s just a short 4-km drive into Tiracol from Redi, the last town on the Maharashtrian Konkan. Fittingly, Maharashtra ends with a sea fort, a sacred temple and a glorious, secluded beach. True to nature, Goa goes one better. A fort of its own welcomes the traveller to Goa's shores, beside a calm, teal river flowing along khamosh green islands of mangroves, beyond which stretches an equally secluded beach. What's more, this fort sits cheekily on Maharashtra's shore itself, the Portuguese seizing on a weak moment in history to jump a river and land in the bastion of the Sawant of neighbouring Wadi. A white crucifix loudly announces the Portuguese heritage above the blackened laterite of the fortifications. From these living chapters of history, Tiracol unveils significant aspects of India?s past, including turning points like the 15th of August in 1954 when Goan revolutionaries came to this fort to raise the Indian flag. If you dislike the processed flavour of sightseeing, you can give up on it completely as you enter the ramparts of a religion at Fort Tiracol, which contains a 100-year-old Chapel of St Anthony and a 400-year-old Church of the Holy Trinity. For an experience that is not quite Maharashtra and not quite Portugal, Tiracol manages to reach deep into the landscape of your soul.

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Querim Beach and Village
  The beach you see from your room in Tiracol Fort lies on the opposite bank of the Arondem, or Tiracol Estuary. If you want to go for a swim, upon crossing the river by ferry you are just a minute away from the deserted, 3-mile-long Querim Beach. The beach is remote and beautiful, with just a handful of cold drink stalls near the ferry point. Dozens of birds inhabit the mangroves along the estuary.

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Arambol Beach
  About 12 km further down from Querim are the tree-lined Kalacha and Arambol beaches. Not as action-packed as the Golden Stretch of Bardez, Arambol's white beach lined with palms is nevertheless a great beach to hang out on. It uniquely boasts a fresh water lagoon right on the shore, just north of Kalacha. Bathe in it to get rid of the sting of salt seawater. The hippies discovered this tranquil fishing settlement and turned up in large numbers to bask by the lagoon in their birthday suits. So there's a high likelihood you'll get to see nudies here. Take a stroll through Arambol Village, a 10-minute walk up from the beach, following the road from Arambol Pizzeria that's lined with beer bars, fish shacks and restaurants. Ask around here for paragliding, or buy yourself some healing at the Chakra and Tai Chi shacks.

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Mandrem, Asvem and Junas
  In the shade of cashew trees, just south of Arambol Beach are the unspoilt sands of Mandrem, lined with canoes. The tiny twin beaches of Asvem and Junas at Mandrem, shaded by hills, form a corridor along which you can trek to Arambol along the sands and over cliffs.

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Madachem Godd in Morjim
  This village gets its name from goddess Bhagwati, who was fished out of the sea by fishermen, or morjes. It is believed that she came out of the water astride a peacock, hence Morjim. The village is also the home of Goa's madachem godd, golden-brown palm jaggery. Five km away is the tree-lined Morjim Beach, favoured by turtles. From here, you can get a view of Chapora Fort to the south. Turtle Beach, which lies between Morjim and Chopdem, was once open to surfers but is now a turtle sanctuary.
Content Source: 
Outlook Traveller
Contributed by: 
Lesley A Esteves and Pramila N Phatarphekar
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