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 Last updated Friday, 17 February 2006                                                                              A warm welcome to all our visitors.

 
 
Beaches Of Goa
• Anjuna Beach
• Baga Beach
• Benaulim Beach
• Bogmalo Beach
• Calangute
• Cavelosim Beach
• Chapora Beach
• Colva Beach
• Condolim Beach
• Dona Paula
• Palolem Beach
• Vagator Beach
• Train Schedule
• Map
     

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Chapora Beach

 

Location: 10-km From Mapusa, North Goa
Main Attraction: Chapora Fort
Nearby Attraction: Vagator Beach, Anjuna Beach, Siolim
Best Time To Visit: November To March

 

Crouched in the shadow of a Portuguese fort on the opposite, northern side of the headland from Vagator, Chapora, 10-km from Mapusa, is a lat busier than most north coast villages. Dependent on fishing and boat building, it has, to a great extent, retained a life of its own independent of tourism. The workaday indifference to the annual invasion of Westerners is most evident on the main street, lined with as many regular stores as travellers cafes and restaurants.

It's unlikely that Chapora will ever develop into a major resort, either. Tucked away under a dense canopy of trees on the muddy southern shore of a river estuary, it lacks both the space and the white sand that have pulled crowds to Calangute and Colva.

 

The Pit Stop:
If one has one's own transport however, Chapora is a good base from which to explore the region: Vagator is on the doorstep, Anjuna is a short ride to the south, and the ferry crossing at Siolim --gateway to the remote north of the state - is barely fifteen minutes away by road. The village is also well connected by bus to Mapusa, and there are plenty of sociable bars and cafes to hang out in. Apart from the guesthouses along the main road, most of the places to stay are long stay houses in the woods.

Chapora Old fort:
Chapora's chief landmark is its venerable Old Fort, most easily reached from the Vagator side of the hill. At low tide, one can also walk around the bottom of the headland, via the anchorage, and the secluded coves beyond it, to big Vagator, then head up the hill from there.

 

Click to enlarge this map
   

How to Get There:

 

Road: Direct buses arrive at Chapora three times daily from Panjim, and every fifteen minutes from Mapusa, with departures until 7.00 pm. Motorcycle taxis hang around the old banyan tree at the far end of the main street, near where the buses pull in.

Places to Stay:

If one wants to check in to a reasonable guesthouse try the west side of the main street in Chapora.

Eating Out:
Finding somewhere to eat in Chapora is easy: just take a pick from the crop of affordable little cafes and restaurants on the main street. The popular Welcome, halfway down, offers a reasonable selection of inexpensive and filling seafood, Western and Vegetarian dishes, plus relentless reggae and techno music, and backgammon sets. The Preyanka, nearby, is in much the same mould, but has a few more Indian and Chinese options. If one is suffering from chilli burn afterwards, Scarlet Cold Drinks and the Sai Ganesh Café, both a short way east of the main street, knock up deliciously cool fresh fruit milkshakes.
 

 
 
 
Tip: To avoid Bombay going north 'Poona' is the quickest bypass route as Bombay is best avoided for travelling through

 


USEFUL INFORMATION

Exchange: The Bank Of Baroda on the Mapusa Road will make encashment against visa cards, but doesn't do foreign exchange, nor is it a good place to leave valuables.

Post Office: The post office, on the Mapusa Road, 1-km inland, has an efficient Poste Restante counter.

Note: Whenever one comes, keep a close eye on one's valuables. Theft, particularly from the beach, is a big problem. Party nights are the worst; if one stays out late, keep the money and papers with oneself, or lock them somewhere secure. Thieves have even been known to break into local houses by lifting tiles off the roof.
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