Common questions
Festival dates and the ban window, water rationing, getting around, the castles, and where official news actually appears.
Plain answers to the questions people ask about living in and visiting Cape Coast (Oguaa). Dated facts carry their year — if something here has drifted, use the report link at the bottom of the page.
When is Fetu Afahye?
Fetu Afahye is Cape Coast's annual festival, run by the Oguaa Traditional Council under the Omanhene. It traditionally climaxes with a grand durbar on the first Saturday of September — in 2025 (the 61st edition) durbar week ran 31 August to 6 September. Each year's programme is announced by the council, usually from around July, on local radio.
What does the festival ban window prohibit?
In the weeks before the festival, a ban on noise-making, fishing in the Fosu Lagoon, and funerals applies in the Oguaa Traditional Area — in 2025 it began 5 August. Prohibited: loud music and drumming, quarreling in the traditional area, pounding fufu after 6pm, and loud wailing. In 2025 the lagoon stayed closed to fishing until 2 September and funerals were banned until 19 September. Asafo companies monitor compliance, and sanctions apply.
Why is there sometimes no water in the taps?
Cape Coast's supply comes from the Brimsu Headworks on the Kakum river plus the Sekyere Hemang plant on the Pra. In the dry season, low inflows — worsened by galamsey siltation upstream — can cut production sharply; in bad spells Ghana Water has rationed supply across Cape Coast North, South and Elmina and run free tanker services with the Fire Service.
Rationing schedules are announced over radio, not posted online. Ghana Water's toll-free line is 0800 40000, and its Central Region office in Cape Coast is 0332 133289.
How does visiting the castles actually work?
You just turn up. Cape Coast Castle and Elmina Castle are walk-in: tickets at the gate, a guided tour included, tours leaving whenever a group has formed — roughly every 30 to 60 minutes on busy days. There is no online booking and none is needed. Hours, fee tiers and a side-by-side of the two castles are on the "Visiting the castles" page on this site.
How do people get around town?
Shared taxis and trotros — there are no published schedules; you learn the routes by asking. Fares are negotiated or set by custom and can jump when it rains hard (about 30% during the April 2025 floods, by one report). UCC runs campus shuttles for students. Cape Coast sits on the Accra–Takoradi coastal highway, about 144 km from Accra and 62 km from Takoradi.
Why does the town feel emptier some months?
Cape Coast is a university town. The 2021 census put the metro at 189,925 people, and the real number swells and shrinks with the University of Cape Coast calendar — hostels, food vendors and shared taxis all follow term time.
Where do official announcements actually appear?
On the radio, first and often only. ATL FM 100.5 (the University of Cape Coast's station) carries Oguaa Traditional Council announcements; Kastle FM 90.3, Cape 93.3 FM and TW Radio 88.9 also serve the metro. Water rationing, fishing rules and festival bans all reach Cape Coast this way — if you're waiting on an official date, listen rather than search.
Which areas flood when it rains hard?
Heavy rain regularly overwhelms the gutters. In the 29 April 2025 downpour, NIB Road, the Melcom area and the Kingsway-to-Tantri stretch were inundated, and residents have been telling reporters for years that clogged gutters make it a matter of time before the next one. Drainage runs through wetlands into the Fosu Lagoon at Bakano. The Cape Coast Metropolitan Assembly (CCMA) is the responsible authority.
When can't the canoes fish?
Two standing rules: the weekly fishing holiday — Tuesday, as along most of Ghana's coast — and the Fosu Lagoon ban during the Fetu Afahye season each August. The national closed season has exempted canoes in both 2025 and 2026, though trawlers and semi-industrial vessels stop in July–August. Current dates are kept on the "Fishing rules & seasons" page on this site.
What is premix, and why do people argue about it?
Premix is the subsidised outboard fuel sold to canoe operators through Landing Beach Committees — Cape Coast has five, at Ola, Brofoyedur, Abrofo Mpoano, Ekon and Duakor Abakam. By law 53% of the proceeds must fund community development, and for years fishers said they never saw where the money went. Since 2025–26 the National Premix Fuel Secretariat audits the committees quarterly and publishes the accounts, and the price is capped — GH¢180 per yellow 'Kufuor' gallon as of June 2026.
Where is the main market?
Kotokuraba, in the town centre — the name means 'crab hamlet', and Oguaa, Cape Coast's Fante name, itself means 'market'. The market was rebuilt and reopened in 2016. Many traders still sell on the surrounding streets, so the street trade around it is as much the market as the building. Abura is the other major market.