Saturday, 22 October 2016

Panjim's Latin Quarters

Between 1830 and 1839, when plague threatened to destroy Old Goa, the Portuguese residents decided to move to Nova Goa. They settled around a natural spring, and called their new home Fontainhas. 


Street in the Latin Quarter 


The Latin Quarters are bound by the Altinho hill to the west and the Ourem creek to the east and tucked away from the bustle of the main city. The latin quarter is a town within a town, with it's own unique character and is in many ways a replica of a small town in the Iberian peninsula.

Local Spice Farms


These terraced heavens called kulagars, not only grow areca nut but also different spice plants, fruit and vegetable bearing trees, such as jackfruit, mangoes, chickoo, drumsticks and bread fruit. They are irrigated by springs from hills or water pumped from rivulets and fertilized using natural organic manure. Being thickly vegetated, the kulagars attract a lot of birds and other fauna. An ancient custom followed by these plantations, is to leave about a tenth of the ripened fruit on the trees to sustain the wildlife.

Enterprising owners of some of these have converted their properties into green havens, now popularly known as the Spice Gardens; promising interesting guided tours through the groves and vines laden with spices like pepper, cinnamon, cardamom, nutmeg, tumeric and exotic herbs.

Pathway leading through the groves