On the Road to Bali
Monday, September 5, 2011
Exploring the island...the end
We're are back in Canada now but here are some photos of our final days in Bali...
These finials top just about every structure here. I try to find out what the design symbolizes but no one seems to know...the only answer I manage to get is that they connect the buildings with God in the sky. When I go to the nearest temple supply store to pick one up for myself, I discover that they are not made out of wood as I had thought, but concrete or pottery and weight A LOT!! Too heavy for my suitcase
I read that it's the law that adults wear helmets but there can't be much enforcement as many don't. Even when people wear them, it's rare to see kids with them on. We are told that child helmets are hard to come by. Hmmm...Maybe there's a business opportunity here...
This little girl is standing on the seat between her parents while they whip along the highway,
This dog seems to be enjoying the ride.
And the pigs...but we know where they're headed.
In addition to mandatory sarongs, some temples have other restrictions. I don't notice any women turning back though.
One of the holiest temples outside Denpasar.
How rice is dried.
At first I thought this was the local hooch, Arak, for sale. Almost every house or store has bottles like this sitting outside. Our driver tells us they are litres of gasoline for sale to scooter drivers. There are very few gas stations in the villages.
Roosters in baskets sit everywhere. Although cock fighting is supposed to be highly illegal (worth five years in jail) it is permitted to 'sacrifice' up to three at a time this way as long as it's done in a temple and there is no gambling involved. I'm pretty sure this is enforced about as much as the helmet law.
more terraces...
These cute little guys are waiting to be made into bunnie satay.
The manager of our hotel suggests a drive to the northern lakes of the island and hires us a car and driver.

Durians!
It is also suggested that we drive out to Tunah Lot on the West coast to see the sunset from the temple carved out of an island. Apparently it will be peaceful and beautiful. But no one in Nusa Dua remembers that today is a government holiday and everybody from Jakarta has come to Bali to do the exact same thing and to check out other sacred items near the site.


I'm reconsidering whether I want to wait for sunset. What happens if the tide comes in and I have to swim back to shore in the dark along with 20,000 others??
Perhaps many are thinking the same, as only a few are seen hiking up to the temple's sunset terrace.
Thursday, September 1, 2011
How to see Bali...





Wednesday, August 31, 2011
Crossing the equator to Bali
The first thing B does when we check into our hotel is flush the toilet to watch the water going counter clock wise.
We spend our first morning getting to know our beach...and it's a busy one. Apparently this is where every Indonesian wants to play water sports. I didn't realize that Jakarta is only a three-hour ferry away.
After a relaxing hour-long massage (I have two masseuses work on me at the same time and I still only pay $5 in total)...it's time to check out sarongs and sundresses.
A little further along... the beach temple...
...but we needn't go too far to make an offering as there is also one across the street from our hotel...one beside our hotel...another just a block from that, two more the block after...well in fact, there is a temple just about every two or three houses.
And this is what you do...fill these little (or big) banana leaf baskets with grass, cookies, rice and other snacks and offer them to the evil spirits twice a day...once to ask for protection the second time to say thanks for the protection. You can add cigarettes too if your spirits are smokers.
After the birds, dogs, cats and rats get through with the contents, the baskets end up all over the streets and beaches, get blown among the trees and bushes, clog the rivers and sewers...
Time for lunch...I wonder what our server's going to bring us from inside those containers...?
THIS!!! between the satays, curries and vegetables in peanut sauce, I find it difficult to stop eating. The food is amazingly delicious and ridiculously cheap. Although our hotel room has a full kitchen, it's pointless to bother cooking.
A platter of very interesting fruits await us when we check in. I don't know the name of the seedy one (sweet and refreshing) but the other is called snake fruit because it has an outer skin just like a snake...and hard! I think they're actually wood until Bruno cuts one open. They taste a little like pears.
Kuta beach...we take a taxi here to check out the best surfing spot on the island. It seems calm but...
...just after I snap this shot, a huge wave sneaks in and totally soaks me.
An outrigger sits just beyond the breakers
The Coke deity?
Hmmm, what's B focussing in on?
I'd love to take some of these home. Since temples are big business here, so is carving...everyone needs their stone gods.
All hand done!
I go in search of the evil spirits...
...and notice we share the same hairstyle...
...I think it has something to do with the heat.



I go in search of the evil spirits...

...and notice we share the same hairstyle...

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