Tag Archives: bali

Days 117-121: Nusa Dua, Bali

Marc and I started our long journey back down from Lovina in the north to Nusa Dua in the south for one simple reason: we needed to get our visa extended. And so we left at noon and started heading south, on the way stopping at the largest waterfall in Bali: Git Git. After stopping at Git Git town instead of the waterfall thanks to Google Maps’ inaccuracy, we found our way, parked the jeep, refused the offers for a guide (which we find ourselves doing on a regular basis in Indonesia) and started the walk down the path to the waterfall. Walking through the path we passed by little shops selling beautiful souvenirs and also a guy selling Luwak coffee with the Civets cats that they use to process the coffee in a cage and their faeces with the digested coffee beans on display. After 10 minutes of walking we arrived in front of a beautiful, 35 metre high and powerful waterfall. Over the past 4 months of travelling we have seen many waterfalls, but this was by far the biggest and most breathtaking of them all. We enjoyed a swim in the pool under the waterfall and I tried to get as close to it as possible but the water was so powerful that there was a strong current, hurricane winds and water spraying everywhere. I managed to get within 2 metres before I had to stop for fear of my bikini top and pants being blown off me. Marc managed to dive under and surface behind the waterfall where he stayed for a minute or so before coming back.

Gitgit waterfall. Gitgit waterfall.

We spent around 3 hours at this waterfall swimming, enjoying the view, taking photos and having a drink nearby. After we left, we stopped for a late lunch at Lake Bratan and continued from there at around 5pm. What was (according to Google Maps) an hour and a half drive down to Nusa Dua, turned into a 4 hour drive because of traffic. The Indonesians are smart enough to do road works on a single carriageway (the most main road of all Bali) during peak hour.

Anyway, our stay in Nusa Dua was completely devoid of adventure. We made the trip to Denpasar to start our visa extension process and then returned the jeep for 3 days to save some cash and to get it serviced (our poor Jimmy had been pushed to his limits). So we had to hang around Nusa Dua for 3 days to wait until our visa was accepted and therefore we could pay for it. Since the public beaches in the area aren’t so great and the private ones are owned by massive 5 star resorts, we spent 3 days of luxury living, sneaking in hotels or going to beach clubs for lunch, and spending the day literally eating and chilling by their pools. It was a hard knock life.

The highlight of our 4 day stay here: we found out that two Maltese guys we know were on holiday in Bali and so we met up with them for some dinner and mohitos one night. It was fun catching up and it felt great being around Maltese again (apart from Maria in Ubud, they were the first Maltese we had met in 4 months).

On the last day we got the jeep back, paid our visa and headed for a short 3 day trip to Java to climb our first Indonesian volcano, which also happens to have an acid crater lake and is the only volcano in the world where you can witness sulphur mining. Stay tuned to hear all about it 🙂

-Vanessa-

Days 105-109: Ubud, Bali

It is difficult to find the words to describe Ubud. Essentially, it is a small town comprised of a few streets lined with uniquely designed cafes, restaurants, art galleries and shops selling the coolest and most colourful clothes and bags ever. The town is actually surrounded by forest and so you will find yourself walking in streets with trees hanging low over your head, or walking over bridges above small ravines. The outskirts of Ubud is just beautiful, lush, green rice paddies. Scattered around everywhere you find simple yet beautiful Hindu temples and devout locals who give their daily offering- a banana leaf with flowers and incense- making the place even smell good. And that’s Ubud for you: green, healthy (everything seems to be organic), natural, chic, happy and hippyish.

We were mesmerized and infatuated with the place within a few hours. On our first day we went to visit Green School as we knew that a Maltese friend of ours, Maria, worked there. At the risk of sounding like a bimbo, discovering this school was a completely OMG moment. The school is literally like a campus made up of different buildings, built entirely out of bamboo. As the name implies, the school is completely environmentally friendly and this is evident not only in the architecture but also in the curriculum. Maria gave us a tour of this fascinating place and (never in my life did I think I would ever say this) we both ended up wishing we were kids again back at school- but only at this school.

When we got to our guesthouse, we discovered a little surprise in our bathroom. I opened the door to find a chicken on our toilet seat. No, that’s not a metaphor. Our bamboo bungalow was towards the back of the guesthouse and overlooked a rice paddy with lots of chicken. Since our bathroom window didn’t have glass covering it, the chicken manage to accidentally (or perhaps purposely) squeeze into the gap. Marc and the farmer from next door managed to catch and release it back into the field and only after did we realise that it had literally shat in our toilet. I doubt many people in the world get to say that a chicken crapped in their toilet, but I do.

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Anyway, the next three days we enjoyed taking the beauty of Ubud all in, as well as enjoying some amazing fresh and healthy meals. We visited the famous Monkey forest, where Marc was befriended by a baby monkey who jumped on his shoulder and refused to jump off. On one of the evenings we met Maria at an event in which different groups of people spoke about environmental issues and what needs to be done about them. The most inspiring of all was actually given by two young girls, less than 13 years old both from Green School who started a campaign which aims to completely ban the use of plastic bags all over Bali.

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A house in the middle of the lush rice paddies around Ubud

On the 3rd day we decided to do some sight seeing, mainly just visiting two famous temples in the area. So we set off for Kuil Gunung Kawi, a temple supposedly surrounded by rice paddies. After following google maps into some village road, we asked some locals where the temple was. They told us to park there and walk down the rice paddy to reach the temple. A group of around 6 local boys, no more than 12 years old, took on the role of guides for us and led us down through a passage way that led onto a very flooded rice paddy. We walked along the ledge as the pathway was actually flooded with water and had become a sort of river, and followed the boys for about 10 minutes down this ledge adjacent to the paddy, balancing ourselves carefully. After crossing through a muddy strip of rice paddy we eventually asked the boys how far away it was, making us realise that we had actually come the wrong way and had to cross through and jump down and over several layers of paddies to get to this temple. It seemed like quite a mission and so we turned back to the jeep and after a 5 minute drive we found ourselves in front of the actual entrance to the temple just 15 minutes before closing time.

We had almost made it. All we had to do was get out of the car, lock, walk to the entrance, pay for our ticket (some of the better known temples are quite commercial) and enter. We got as far as getting out of the car, and locking, but that’s it. We had gotten into the habit of locking the lazy way by just pushing down the lock and slamming the door. Nothing wrong with that, right? Wrong. You run the risk of accidentally leaving your keys in the car when you slam the door, therefore locking yours keys inside. I think you get where I’m going with this. Just to be clear, entirely Marc’s fault. He put his keys in his bag and then changed bag, forgetting to transfer the keys. He realised the second he slammed the door. As if just to tease us, my door hadn’t closed properly but was still locked, so we were trying to force it open when a local woman noticed what was going on and eventually we managed to call a “mechanic”. Just when we were about to try break in with a borrowed hanger, he arrived with the appropriate tools. By this time, 5pm had come and gone so our attempt to visit Gunung Kawi was officially a complete fail.

We still had about half an hour to visit another temple in the vicinity, Tirta Empul, and so we made our way there. This temple is famous for its holy springs, where the devout enter a pool and proceed towards a sort of personal cleansing ritual. This ritual includes 3 offerings, moving from stage to stage through the pool, washing their head and drinking from the holy water gushing into the pool. What Marc and I found so fascinating about this was that each statue in every stage had a Swastika sign, a symbol that for us Europeans is associated with Nazism. We realised that, just like many other things in the world, the original meaning of the Swastika must have been good and pure. We were proven right after asking a local who explained that it represents the creator god Brahma and symbolising a balanced life.

On our final day we decided to take it easy and went for a walk on a pathway through lush green rice paddies, enjoyed a healthy lunch at a popular cafe in the middle of these paddies then we got a Balinese massage to the sound of birds and nature and after enjoyed a bottle of Balinese wine at another open air cafe in the middle of the rice paddies. A perfect day. We ended it in style by meeting Maria at Bambu Indah, a beautiful, luxurious and fascinating hotel, owned by the same owner of Green School with the same concept: all rooms and huts completely built out of bamboo. Simply breathtaking. And the food was amazing too.

All in all, although we had been told from before that Ubud was the highlight of Bali, I must admit, it far exceeded our expectations. The whole place was just so lush, green, cultural, spiritual and relaxing. You must definitiely visit Ubud at least one time in your life.

-Vanessa-

Days 100-104: Kuta and Uluwatu, Bali

The excitement of Bali and also reuniting with my two University housemates after two years of absence- was so overpowering I couldn’t even sleep in the plane. I had had enough of leeches and insects and jungle, and couldn’t wait for some surfing, drinking, and whatever else you do in Bali. Little did I know of how much there actually is to see and do in Bali.

Marc and I arrived late at night and after being harrassed by several taxi drivers, we finally found our way to our pretty little guesthouse in Uluwatu in the south of Bali and immediately knocked out for the night. When we woke up the next morning we were stunned by the beauty that surrounded us. From our back balcony we had a view of a forest with a few typical Balinese roofs scattered around. From our front balcony a beautiful garden and pool in a sort of Greek style. I was already in love with Bali.

We rented a jeep and spent the day driving around the Southern part of Bali. If you thought people in Malta drive crazily, come to Bali. The roads are dominated by all the scooters that shoot past, either with foreigners carrying surfboards, or with local families squashed up onto one scooter (mum, dad and two kids), or driven by local kids no older than 13 going to and from school. I even stupidly managed to burn my leg against an exposed exhaust pipe when I was trying to sqeeze through some parked scooters. A part from all the scooters there are a good number of jeeps and cars also. As if the constant traffic weren’t enough, the scooters would overtake from either side of the car, sometimes even squeezing inbetween cars, and cross over from one lane to another without a care in the world. Oh, and the traffic lights might aswell be nonexistant because noone follows them anyway. Marc was driving most of the time and said he felt like he was playing some Super Mario game, dodging obstacles left, right and centre.

Besides our inital shock at the road chaos, we were amazed at how Uluwatu is literally all about surfing. All you see are surf shops, cafes with surf boards and tourists driving around on scooters with surfboards. Even our guesthouse had a room full of about 40 surfboards of guests or for rental. For breakfast the following day we went to the famous Uluwatu beach and realised why this area is all about the surfing. A cliff overlooking some massive surf and a beach that can only be reached by walking literally through a cave, this place was a haven for surf junkies. And definitely not a place for beginners.

In the afternoon we went up to the famous party area called Kuta to meet with my ex-Uni housemates Bex and Siobhan who were on a round the world trip. I hadn’t seen them in over 2 years so it was really great meeting up with them again. We spent the day chilling on Kuta beach, a massive stretch of golden sand full of tourists and surfers. Reminded me a bit of Golden Bay in Malta, except that the sea in Kuta was much more dirty.

The next 3 days were spent mostly in the Kuta region. We went out a couple of nights for some cocktails and dancing, spent a lot of time relaxing and swimming in Bex and Shiv’s hotel pool, ate a lot of good meals from the various restuarants around Kuta, went shopping and even went to the hairdresser so Shiv could get the side of her hair shaven off (and I spontaneously got some braides on one side too). We also visited Uluwatu temple, high up on a cliff, and watched some traditional Balinese dance which was actually quite weird and way too overcrowded with tourists so we left before it finished. On the final day, Shiv and I braved ourselves for a surfing lesson on the beach in Kuta. It was actually really fun, apart from all the water I swallowed and the various grazes I got from being unable to properly jump off the board. We both managed to stand up quite a few times and the guys teaching us made the hour even more fun by cheering us on.

Monday morning I bid my sad farewells to Bex and Shiv, promising that we would meet again before the end of the year, and I really hope we stick to those promises. Uluwatu and Kuta are surfing and partying meccas, and Marc and I were now ready to change the scene and indulge ourselves into the genuine Balinese culture which contrasts so blatantly with the culture in the south. So, we made our way to Ubud. If you have seen the film Eat, Pray, Love, you will understand why this place is so stunningly amazing and unique. But I will also explain soon 🙂

-Vanessa-

P.s. Have a look at my album of the trip here:

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