An idyll no more: why I’m leaving Goa

goa-idyll-no-more
Photo by Matthew Parker

In a very thoughtful article, Deepti Kapoor, reveals reasons why she and her husband decided to leave Goa, talks about negative environmental and social impacts of tourism in this part of India and suggests solutions for improvement.

“Sometimes, when the sun is setting over a village called Aldona, and the evening bread is delivered on the backs of bicycles, you can convince yourself that Goa is all right. When Reginald or Tulsidas or Lata or Maria stand at the front gate speaking to that passerby at dusk, and the urak season starts slipping into the feni days, so all you smell on the road is the arch fermentation of cashew apples: yes, it’s OK.

But then you think about the beaches, the ones with the plastic bags in the water, which you mistook for jellyfish, and the shards of glass from the beer bottles carried into the waves, which now churn with sewage from the septic tanks. Those beaches; you can forget those beaches.”

This is an excerpt from an article originally published on The Guardian. To read the whole story, visit An idyll no more: why I’m leaving Goa.

Travindy
Travindy
Travindy is an independent website featuring news and opinion on all issues to do with tourism and sustainability. Written primarily for an industry audience, our aim is to support the transformation of the sector into one that is regenerative, restorative and fully inclusive.

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