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Colva

Colvá
Praia da Colvá
Village
Colvá beach
Colvá beach
Nickname(s): Saxttiche Yead, White Sand Beach
Colvá is located in Goa
Colvá
Colvá
Colvá is located in India
Colvá
Colvá
Location of Colvá in Goa
Coordinates: 15°16′34″N 73°55′02″E / 15.27611°N 73.91722°E / 15.27611; 73.91722Coordinates: 15°16′34″N 73°55′02″E / 15.27611°N 73.91722°E / 15.27611; 73.91722
Country (1961 to Present)  India
State Goa
District South Goa
Sub-district Salcete
Past Country (1510 to 1961)  Portugal
Elevation 1.1 m (3.6 ft)
Time zone IST (UTC+5:30)
Postcode 403708
Area code(s) +91 832
Colva Beach
Activities Swimming Swimming Fishing Fishing, Boat Ride, parasailing, jet skiing, boat ride, wind surfing

Colvá is a coastal village in Salcete, south Goa, on the west coast of India. Colva Beach stretches for around 2.4 kilometres (1.5 mi), part of a beach consisting of about 25 kilometres (16 mi) of powder white sand, lined along its shore by coconut palms and extending from Bogmalo in the north to Cabo de Rama in the south.

Colvá is a famous tourist destination, visited for its beaches, budget hotels, guest houses, beach shacks, food stalls, restaurants, pubs and bars. The beaches are constantly monitored by lifeguards, and the swimming areas are flagged for warnings.

The village had significant importance to Portugal and was the retreat for Goa's high society, who would come to Colvá for their "Mundanca" or change of air. Today the Portuguese area is dotted with houses or villas, including many ruins. On weekends, huge crowds of tourists, visitors from around the world as well as local Indians, enjoy the sunset and various activities. The beach is particularly busy in October, when hordes of religious pilgrims come and visit Colvá Church, called Igreja de Nossa Senhora das Merces, that was founded in 1630 by the Roiz family and rebuilt in the eighteenth century on the village square.

The local people have been fishermen since the mid-16th century. They include Hindu converts as well as migrants from various Portuguese overseas territories such as Angola, Mozambique, Brazil, etc. as well as Portugal itself.

Colvá was a vast barren uninhabited land with a scenic Arabian Sea beach that had beach plants such as scaevola sericea until a few Goud Saraswat Brahmin settled there as migrants, primarily in the neighbouring village of Benaulim. The mughals, the people of Adil Shahi dynasty preferred the north and hilly regions of Goa, where they built forts and defences, rather than the coastal belt, and hence had not settled the barren land of Colvá. It was the Portuguese conquest which established the western regions of South Goa as a full-fledged human settlement.


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Wikipedia

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