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Thursday, February 09 2012

Chilled-out Goa gives colourful, but hair-raising, welcome

Danny Boyle is given a traditional welcome at the Sahakari spice farm, Goa

 

It was the terrifying moment a lorry came hurtling round a corner on our side of the road that I thought it was all over.

With no seatbelt – hell, I didn’t even have a seat – I was hanging on for dear life at the front of our rickety little bus as we negotiated the villages of Goa, where drivers make up the rules of the road as they go along.

Cars and lorries share the roads with cattle, the odd elephant and more scooters than you can count – many with women on the back clutching babies.The young, the old...and cattle share the road in this typical village street in Goa

No one represents this chilled-out attitude more than our driver Sanjay, who expertly negotiated the traffic without so much as breaking into a sweat.

For despite the apparent chaos, road users manage to work things out among themselves in Goa, where things are as laid-back as they come.

Perhaps because during the late 1960s and 1970s it was synonymous with hedonistic hippies, mesmerised by sunsets over the Arabian Sea and full-moon beach parties.

While most of the hippies have gone, they have left behind a relaxed feel that sets India’s smallest and most liberal state apart from the rest of the country.
I travelled on Qatar Airways’ inaugural flight from London to Goa, via the airline’s main hub of Doha.

The faultless service of its award-winning business class made it easy to see why it calls itself the world’s five-star airline.

Even travelling the leg from Doha to Goa in economy class – Qatar Airways’ economy seats have the world’s most generous legroom – left me feeling more relaxed than I ever have after a long-haul flight.

We spent our first three nights at Taj Vivanta,  a six-month-old city hotel in the capital Panjim. It’s the perfect base to explore Goa’s Portuguese heritage – it was under the country’s rule until 1961 – and the tiny streets of its Latin quarter that could easily be on the Algarve.

Touring the remains of Old Goa – it was burned down after the devastating 1843 plague and is now a World Heritage site – is a delight.

The hippie flea market at Anjuna beach, GoaOn a visit to the Sahakari  spice farm, one of Goa’s largest, we were treated to a traditional welcome complete with dancing, confetti and floral garlands.
An equally unique experience was haggling my heart out at the hippie flea market on Anjuna  beach.

Hawkers flogged jewellery, fabrics and trinkets from all over India, their wares spread out under the shade of palm trees in an enchanting riot of colour overlooking the sea.

We spent our final two nights at the luxurious Taj Holiday Village, in the coastal village of Sinquerim,  which has a touch of Bali about it and is next to the landmark Fort Aguada  Beach Resort, also in the Taj empire.

Both are just a stone’s throw from some of the best beaches in Goa’s 80 miles of rugged coastline and close to the tourist hub of Baga,  with its tacky shops, bars pumping 1980s club classics and eateries selling everything from sausage and mash to chicken nuggets and chips.The pool at the Taj Holiday Village in Goa

Thankfully, traditional Goan food blends the Latin love of meat and fish with India’s taste for spices.

It’s just one of the things that make Goa the jewel in India’s tourism crown.

But if you plan to spice up your next holiday with a trip to Goa, just make sure somebody else does the driving.

Qatar Airways now flies to Goa four times a week from London Heathrow and Gatwick, with return fares from £551 in economy and £1,831 in business class. www.qatarairways.com

Double rooms at the Taj Vivanta, in the capital Panjim, start from £84 per night. Cottages for up to two adults and two children at the Taj Holiday Village, in the coastal village of Sinquerim, start from £190 per night. www.tajhotels.com

Wednesday, December 02 2009

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