Puri Travel Guide Part 18: Puri Beach — The Bay of Bengal at Sunset
Complete Puri Beach guide: Swargadwar vs Golden Beach, sea bathing safety, lifeguard tips, Nolia tradition, evening food, what to do and what to avoid at the beach in May.
Part 18: Puri Beach — The Bay of Bengal at Sunset
After a day of temples, heat, crowds, and Mahaprasad, the evening calls for the simplest of pleasures: sitting on the sand, watching the sun dip toward the horizon, and feeling the cool sea breeze wash away the exhaustion. Puri Beach — stretching for approximately 10 kilometres along the eastern coast of the city — offers exactly this.
But the beach in Puri is not just a pretty postcard. The Bay of Bengal here is powerful, unpredictable, and has claimed lives. Understanding the beach — its geography, its dangers, and its pleasures — is essential for a safe and enjoyable evening.
The Two Faces of Puri Beach
1. Swargadwar Beach — The Main Hub
Swargadwar (literally “Gateway to Heaven”) is the most famous and crowded section of Puri Beach. It is located directly south of the Jagannath Temple, about 1 kilometre from the Lion Gate. This is where most tourists congregate.
What to expect:
- Dense crowds, especially on Saturday evenings
- Rows of plastic chair vendors (₹20-₹50 per hour)
- Jhal Muri, Chaat, Bhelpuri, and other street food stalls
- Horseback riding vendors
- Camel riding vendors
- Souvenir sellers (shells, pearls — mostly fake)
- Religious touts offering “beach blessings” (avoid)
- Strong sea waves and occasional riptides
Spiritual significance: Swargadwar is the traditional Hindu cremation ground of Puri. Pyres burn here daily. While this may seem jarring to first-time visitors, it is a normal and sacred part of Puri’s cultural landscape. The name “Gateway to Heaven” refers to the belief that being cremated here ensures liberation (moksha).
2. Golden Beach (Blue Flag) — The Managed Alternative
About 3 kilometres east of Swargadwar, the Golden Beach (also known as the Blue Flag Beach) offers a dramatically different experience:
- Restricted entry (managed by Puri Municipality)
- Cleaner sand and water
- Lifeguard stations with defined safe swimming zones
- Modern smart lockers (₹19 to ₹118 per hour)
- Designated vendor areas
- Better lighting in the evening
Downside: It requires an auto-rickshaw ride (₹50-₹80 from the temple area) and has limited food options compared to Swargadwar.
My Recommendation
For a Saturday evening with your mother, Swargadwar is fine — it is closer to the temple and railway station, has more food options, and the sheer spectacle of thousands of people on the beach is part of the Puri experience. However, if your mother prefers quiet, choose the area slightly east of Swargadwar — walk 10 minutes along the shore from the main crowd. It gets progressively quieter.
Sea Bathing Safety: The Bay of Bengal Is Not a Swimming Pool
The Bay of Bengal at Puri has claimed numerous lives over the years. The most common causes of drowning are:
- Riptides (Undertow): Powerful underwater currents that pull swimmers out to sea. They are invisible from the shore.
- High Waves: Waves can reach 2-3 metres during certain tidal conditions, even on calm-looking days.
- Sudden Drop-offs: The seabed at Puri is not uniformly shallow. There are points where the sand drops away suddenly, from ankle-deep to chest-deep within a single step.
The Nolias: Your Traditional Lifeguards
Nolias are a traditional fishing community in Puri who have served as hereditary beach lifeguards for generations. They are identifiable by their distinctive conical straw hats and dark, weathered skin. They know the sea at Puri better than anyone alive.
Rules when near the water:
- Never enter the water beyond knee-depth without a Nolia nearby
- Always swim in designated safe zones (marked with green flags)
- If a red flag is displayed, do not enter the water under any circumstances
- If caught in a riptide, do not swim against it — swim parallel to the shore until you escape the current, then swim back
For You and Your Mother
My recommendation: Do not swim. Sit on the sand, dip your feet in the water if the waves are gentle, but do not go deeper than ankle-level. The risk is not worth it on a day trip. Save the sea bathing for a dedicated beach vacation.
What to Eat at the Beach
The evening food scene at Swargadwar is vibrant:
| Item | Cost | Hygiene Rating | My Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|
| Jhal Muri (spicy puffed rice) | ₹20-₹30 | ⭐⭐⭐ | ✅ Must-try |
| Bhelpuri / Chaat | ₹20-₹40 | ⭐⭐ | ⚠️ If freshly made |
| Masala Corn (Bhutta) | ₹20-₹30 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ✅ Safe, hot, delicious |
| Coconut Water | ₹30-₹50 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ✅ Always safe |
| Tea (in earthen kullhad) | ₹10-₹20 | ⭐⭐⭐ | ✅ Perfect beach drink |
| Fried Seafood (fish/prawn) | ₹50-₹100 | ⭐ | ❌ Avoid — hygiene varies |
| Ice Cream (packaged brand) | ₹30-₹60 | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ | ✅ Choose sealed packs |
For your mother: Stick to masala corn, coconut water, and tea. These are hot/sealed options with minimal food safety risk.
The Ideal Beach Itinerary for Saturday Evening
| Time | Activity |
|---|---|
| 4:30 PM | Leave temple area / museum by auto → Beach |
| 5:00 PM | Arrive at Swargadwar area. Rent plastic chairs. |
| 5:00 - 5:30 PM | Sit, relax, feel the sea breeze. Let mother rest. |
| 5:30 PM | Walk along the shore (gently, with sandals in hand) |
| 6:00 PM | Watch the sunset (sets around 6:12 PM in May) |
| 6:15 PM | Buy Jhal Muri and tea from beach vendors |
| 6:30 PM | Walk back to the main road, hail auto to Puri Station |
| 7:00 PM | Arrive at Puri Railway Station for return train |
Beach Safety Checklist
- Do not carry valuables to the sand — leave them in your pouch, strapped close
- Do not leave your mother unattended near the water
- Avoid the beach after 8:00 PM — poorly lit and can attract antisocial elements
- Do not accept “blessings” or “tikka” from beach-side priests — same Panda tactics as the temple
- Carry your footwear — the sand is hot until 5:30 PM
- Emergency contact: 112 (police) or 6370967100 (Tourist Helpline)
Next: Part 19: Motion Sickness, Health, and First Aid — A Medical Companion for the Journey
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