India beaches and bikes: Goa
We headed up to Goa by train and then another 1 hour taxi south to South Goa. Specifically, Canacona (municipal) and Palolem (City/Beach).
Planning for Goa:
Goa is the smallest state in India but we still only had a few days to decide where to go and so the next question was to determine North or South, literally how the state is divided. We had heard that all the beaches were beautiful but that the North was more commercial and party and the South was more laid back. We decided on the South and that is exactly what we got. Possibly even too laid back.
We arrived without any reservation so we did what all backpackers do when they arrive: walk up the beach and start looking at the beach bungalows. The following are the usual suspects on the beach:
We quickly found that we didn’t have too many options as while we were passed rainy season and it was almost mid October the place really had just started setting up. You see every year these make shift plywood and bamboo houses are built then torn down after high season. One of the reasons we read for why is because the government does not want any permanent buildings on the beach. Whether or not that was true, most all days you could hear some hammering, power drilling and some sawing or watched some painting.
We picked up a bungalow, on the sand and steps from the beach for about $10/night. Our hut came with its own makeshift bath and shower, and of course a mosquito net that stretched over our bed. My favorite part was our porch where we could sit shaded and people watch, right from our dorm.
There wasn’t much to do here during shoulder season. Bars and “clubs” were still being built up and so the idea that Goa would be our place to party quickly evaporated. But that was fine. We loved to relax, drink beer, eat great seafood, swim and walk on the beach all day. The day bars that were open were so cool. Everyone was just relaxing drinking beer, listening to Bob Marley or some classic rock.
We did though manage to get in some activities:
Kayaking
We rented a kayak for the day and took off in the water towards a secluded beach we had read about, Butterfly Beach. It was supposed to be a quick trip and mostly it was but when you add the fact that the beach had no life guards and we would be paddling in open waters by ourselves trying to find this beach, I got a little nervous. We also contended with having to know the tides, which we relied on a local’s advice, and many rocks that we knew were underwater as we had seen them in low tide. But we paddled and made it to our own island! It was awesome. Just us, a little cove, some waves and a big tropical jungle behind us we could hike. We laid out, swam and chilled until we were concerned the tide would go down. The second time out I felt much more confident and I think I was pretty good at rowing, if I do say so myself.
Motorbiking
I was so excited to get on a bike and explore other beaches along the Goa coast. It’s really what you do to be able to see the state. But this excursion would be both fun and trying. Our first issue was getting gas, since rentals come without it. There are no gas stations close, so you have to find this lady who will sell you some gas from water bottles. That was annoying. After that it was great. Wind in our hair (with helmet), open roads (watch out for that cow or huge truck that just decided to stop) and views of the jungle and the beach. It was great. We found a beach, bigger than ours about a 30 min drive away. We parked and headed straight for the ocean. Soon we realized that this place was even more dead than our beach. Just a small group of local boys, a tourist couple and some bungalow making carpenters were all we saw up on the beach. The water was practically all ours. We got back on the bike and it was great. We just had a dip, our skins all salty and sun about to set. But as we were riding, distracted by a monkey above us, we hit a bad patch of road and went tumbling. The bike fell and so did we. I managed to quickly jump off but Aaron, trying to protect me was under the bike. I moved the bike off of him and we stood up, both of us simultaneously asking each other if they were okay and not focusing on ourselves. Aaron was a little bloody but both of us just had scrapes. We were shaken up but we really just wanted to get rid of the bike and tend to our wounds so we got back on and headed home. When returning the bike, the owner noticed Aaron’s leg and immediately became distressed. Not for us of course, but his bike. Then ensued a 20 min argument about paying for damages that we know we didn’t make. We got away with paying him 2000 rupees, about $20. Not bad considering. But we did learn our lesson. Always check the bike before rental and note the condition, oh, and don’t let a monkey distract you.
Yoga
I took one class with some “Ashram” who was so uninterested in the instruction that he cut it early. His advice was to come back when I real-time to dedicate – pretentious jerk.
Our days at that beach were amazing. It felt like we had been let in on a secret, as it was just a few of us living it up in the sun by day and walking a deserted beach at night. It was serene and beautiful and certainly not the party or commercial area we expected.
How interesting learning about the temporary beach towns and how scary hearing about your bike accident. As always, photos are terrific, my favorite being the cows on beach scene.
Yeah we didn’t expect the whole beach “town” to appear and disappear based on time of year. And yes the bike accident was scary but our wounds healed within a couple weeks.
Great descriptions! I really admire your flexibility in finding good times no matter what the situation is.
I haven’t seen a “jumping” picture in quite a while. Are you still taking those?
Good point Dave. We have a jumping pic for Goa but we forgot to put it up. Actually if you look at the jumping page on the site we already have Mumbai up, as our jumps usually go up before the posts. We’ll get up that Goa pic!
Jami, thanks for pointing out that the jumping pictures are captured on a separate tab… I had forgotten. What a great set of photos! Who is the clean shaven guy with short hair you are jumping with in Europe? The camera angle sometimes makes your jumps look supernatural… or maybe gravity is less strong over there.
Happy to see that you guys had a nice time in my motherland Goa (minus the scrapes–glad you guys weren’t seriously injured). I’ve never interacted with the people who provide services to visitors (yoga, bike rentals) since I’ve always stayed with family there, but I assure you that the customer service is generally not so terrible! Can’t believe the yoga guy just cut your lesson short like that, lame.
I know! I was so excited since a Goa is a real yogi kind of town, where people head to dedicate weeks of training. I knew I was only going for that one session but still I woke up early and wanted to learn from this guru. It was a real let a down.