Click on the thumb nail picture to view a larger image.

Sunset
at Arambol, a north Goa beach village now
popular among tourists.

Getting
ready for the drama: poster for a Konkani 'tiatr'
at Siolim. The 'tiatr' is a popular form of Konkani drama,
though some sections of Goans look down on it.

Slugfest...
buffalo-style. This is not an artificial
bullfight rigged up by man. It's a real-life thing in the
fields at Saligao. Incidentally, artificial bull-fights
have been banned by the courts in Goa, after complaints
from animal rights activists.

Piety...
at Anjuna. Candles illuminate a roadside shrine.
Goans, both Hindus and Catholics, have traditionally been
known for their religious outlook to life.

Sunset
at Sant Estevam riverfront.

Riverside
temple, at Sant Estevam's Akhada locality. Goa's
temples have a unique charm of their own, and are
architecturally different in some ways from those of
other parts of India.

Full
moon rises over Saligao.

Readying
for the procession, cape-clad men in red and
white get set before a centuries-old church in central
Goa (at Sant Estevam).

Evening
view at Sant Estevam.

Tiles
waiting buyers at Marcela. Goan homes have
traditionally used mud-tiles, which lend a unique
characteristic to the place and also keep the house cool.

Age
old culvert. Though taken for granted, the
traditional infrastructure is what has kept village Goa
working for long.

Ruins...
but scenic ones. Many homes have come crashing
down, as locals migrated far and wide for a living. This
photo is from Pernem taluka.

Moonlight
view of Arambol. Called Harmal locally, this
beach has become a tourist haunt. Earlier, many hippies
thronged to these areas, to escape the crowds of first
Calangute, and then Anjuna.

Pernem
riverside view. Pernem is Goa's northernmost
taluka, just adjoining the state of Maharashtra. It
offers scenic sights and rustic settings.

Village
settings. This home at Siolim has the quaint
charm of a rusting village. Many parts of Goa are still
like this. But if real estate speculators have their way,
they may not remain so for too long.

Temple
view. Shantadurga temple from Marcela in Ponda
taluka. Due to colonial persecution in the Portuguese era,
a number of temples were resettled in Ponda taluka, from
the so-called Old Conquest areas of this state.

Where
time stands still... This bullock-cart, a legacy
of the yesteryears, is still used for transport in much
of rural Goa. Though it's big role is seldom recognised,
such traditional modes of transport have played a crucial
role over the years.

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