Yellow · Mandovi River · Goa
The one yacht on the river nobody forgets. Up to fifteen aboard, two cabins below, and a sunset that has to work to keep up.
Yellow does not blend in, and neither do the people who book her. She is the yellow yacht on the Mandovi — the one the other boats turn to look at, the one your guests describe for weeks afterwards. Meticulously kept, generously sized, and quietly confident. Up to fifteen aboard, with room that never feels borrowed.
Below deck: two air-conditioned cabins, an AC lounge, a kitchenette with microwave, and a TV for the moments between moments. Above: an open sundeck at the bow to be seen from, a rear lounge to disappear into, and an open flydeck for the view nobody else gets. This is the charter for the guest who expects more of himself — and rather likes being treated that way.
Frame One
Anyone can book a white boat. This is the other kind of decision.
Frame Two · The Room
An open sundeck to be seen from. A rear lounge to vanish into. An open flydeck nobody else on the water gets. Bring the whole group — there is space for all of it.
Frame Three · Below & Above
Air-conditioned cabins below, a kitchenette with microwave, a lounge that stays cool while Goa stays warm. Comfort that does not ask you to choose between the view and the breeze.
Frame Four · Golden Hour
When a yellow hull meets a Mandovi sunset, the sky has to share the frame. This is the photograph your guests will not stop sending.
Frame Five
The yellow yacht is waiting at Britona. Your sunset is already booked — it just doesn't know by whom yet.
Frame One
Anyone can book a white boat. This is the other kind of decision.
Frame Two · The Room
An open sundeck to be seen from. A rear lounge to vanish into. An open flydeck nobody else on the water gets.

Frame Three · Below & Above
Air-conditioned cabins below, a kitchenette with microwave, a lounge that stays cool while Goa stays warm.

Frame Four · Golden Hour
When a yellow hull meets a Mandovi sunset, the sky has to share the frame.

Frame Five
The yellow yacht is waiting at Britona. Your sunset is already booked.
Britona to Aguada and back, the Yellow way. Slower where it counts. Golden throughout.
The yellow hull is already turning heads at the jetty. Your crew is ready, the AC cabins are cool, the sundeck is yours. Step aboard. The rest of the river is about to find out you've arrived.
The church on the hill makes its entrance. Photogenic to the point of showing off. From the flydeck, with a yellow rail in the foreground, it's the kind of frame people assume was staged. It wasn't. It's just Goa, doing Goa things.
Every boat passes under this bridge. Few do it in yellow. The span hums overhead, the river opens on the far side, and the people on the bridge — for once — are looking down at you. Wave. You've earned it.
Panjim slides past on the left — Portuguese facades, the lazy Campal gardens, a capital that never felt the need to hurry. From the water it looks like a painting. From Yellow's deck, with a cold drink in hand, it looks like a very good decision.
Five hundred years on the north bank and still the most composed thing on the river. The fort watches everything float past. Today, for the first time in a while, it has something genuinely worth watching.
Where the Mandovi meets the Arabian Sea, the light turns to liquid gold and the dolphins come to inspect the new arrival. Two-hour charters drop anchor here, sundeck out, sky on fire, yellow hull glowing. There are worse places to pause. There are no better ones.
The four-hour charter pushes west past Fort Aguada — four centuries old, still unbothered — and out into the open Arabian Sea, where the lines go in and the deep sea fishing begins. Reel one in or just hold a cold drink and watch; either way the horizon is endless and the yellow hull looks, frankly, magnificent against the blue. This is the stretch people booked the whole thing for.
The city lights come up, the river turns to a mirror, and Panjim glows like it's putting on a show just for the boat heading home. Nobody photographs this part — they're too busy living it. That's rather the point of Yellow.
Eight reasons she's a notch above the rest of the fleet.
No surprises at the end. Everything below comes with the yellow one.
Two options. One unforgettable hull. Whole-boat pricing — never per person.
1 hour cruising the Mandovi — Panjim, the bridge, Reis Magos, Campal — then 1 hour anchored at Miramar as the Arabian Sea turns to gold. Dolphins optional. Stares from other boats, guaranteed.
Ideal for · Sunset soirées, celebrations, groups up to 15
Book 2-Hour CharterThe full Mandovi run — Panjim, under the bridge, Miramar — then past Fort Aguada and out into the open Arabian Sea for deep sea fishing. Four hours, the longest light, the best stretch of water, and a line in the sea. The yellow hull at its most magnificent. This is the one.
Ideal for · Milestone celebrations, anglers, the full day-into-gold run
Book 4-Hour CharterAll prices are for the whole boat. Not per person. Your group, your yellow yacht, your rate.
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