BALI
August 20, 2006
For the photo
album go to:
www.cometosea.us/albums/Slideshow/VietnamToUSA.pdf and start at slide # 220
Coming in to Bali, on August 4, I had a strong current and wind with me through the Lombok Strait. My G.P.S. showed upto 8 1/2 knots over the
bottom. I am moored in a berth at the Bali International Marina for 12
dollars a day. It has showers a nice bar and restaurant. Power and water at the
dock. I bought a bicycle once again. Crossing the equator three times and three
bicycles and three haul outs, pedal power for the course. The marina is a ways
from the main activities on the island. The first Sunday I took a long
trek into Denpasar to go to mass. This was an unusual
experience. The building looked very similar to one of the many Hindu temples
even with some typical stone statues. Then I pedaled to the coast, through a
low lying rice growing area, back to Benoa.
After church I had lunch for eighty cents at the Pasar
(market) and then visited one of the major museums with an incredible
collection of antiquities. These people were so far advanced when Europeans
were still groping around in their caves.
Next to the
museum is one of the main temples in Denpasar.
Visitors are required to wear sarong and the men the head gear.
By chance I had
just bought a Bali outfit at the market and it came in handy at
subsequent temple visits.
Bali is much cleaner than Sulawesi and Sabah and the architecture of the red brick walls, red
tiled roofs and carved sand stone is impressive. But the traveled part of Bali has all the annoying aspects of a major tourist destination. Hawkers
who do not understand the word: "No".
The temperature
and humidity is much lower here than in Sabah and quite pleasant. There is little need for the
"klambou", mosquito net, here.
There are several
boats here in the marina that I had seen last year further east in the South
Pacific. The majority has spent the southern summer in New Zealand or Australia. "Lycia" the Italian boat with it's crew, Lucio, I had met in Ghizo. Pierre and Veronique, the French couple with their three
children, also from a friendship made in Ghizo
arrived here. The marina is quickly filling up with a large fleet of boats that
come here, every year, as a rally-race from Cairns, North
Australia via Flores Island.
There is even a
boat here from Tacoma, "Free Wind", with a retired teachers
couple, the Balmers. Several boats are anchored out
in front of the marina, including "Jolly Celeste" with Thede Doerscher. We befriended in
Apia and met up again in Fiji. Thede celebrated his 51st
birthday here on the 17th, which was also the 61st Indonesian Independence Day
celebration.
"Jolly
Celeste" and the majority of the boats here are heading for Phuket, to sit out the southern hurricane season, via
southern Kalimantan, Singapore and Langkawi. Very few are
following my route to South Africa. One singlehander,
Philippe, a 71 year old Breton, is sailing the 3500 miles from here straight to
Reunion.
Last Sunday I
attended mass once again at St.Joseph and then
continued on, by bicycle, via Sanur to Ubud. This is an about 35 k.m. trip.
The last part is a steady climb from sea level to about 450 meter altitude. I
took some of the side roads and it was an enjoyable ride, apart from having to
get used to the new saddle. The most interesting stop was at the town of Ketewel. The town is a well preserved traditional village,
with the walled rows of houses and temples. The men and women wore the
traditional dress.
There was a
colorful activity of women weaving palm fonts and kneading delicate clay
figures to be used for the frequent temple offerings at the Jagatnatha
temple. Further down the road I came upon a roadside traditional "Laurel
and Hardy" kind of show.
The players,
costumed as an old man and woman, were producing great hilarity from the local
crowd. The masks and costumes and gamelan orchestra were a wonderful site to
watch. These events are the benefit of seeing the country on a slow moving
bicycle.
Ubud is the center of Bali for museums, temples and traditional dance, music and wajang performances. I managed to take in a Kecak , fire dance, show on Sunday evening and a Legong dance on Monday. The city is surrounded by the
famous terraced rice fields.
For 16 dollar a
night, I stayed in a very nice family operated guest house/hotel. Be sure to
see the album photos of the Cremation ceremonies that were held on that Monday.
The bodies are set in a paper mache cow, on an
elaborately decorated platform, with many offerings and then set on fire.
A visit to the Ubud monkey forest is a must. Here several troops of
Macaque monkeys roam around in the forest and its monkey temples.
I was fortunate
to be offered an opportunity to go on an introductory day trip tour of two
ancient Bali villages. Megan, the proprietor of the "Kafe(e)", an Ubud coffee
shop/restaurant, offered me the opportunity to go in her place. This was
organized by a non profit group,
JED, Jaringan Ekowisata Desa (Villages Ecotourism Network) http://www.jed.or.id/
Gin, a young
Australian lady was our guide. JED is a cooperative with 6 villages to promote
eco tourism to their villages and treks in their surroundings. The revenues
from the tourists are to be shared and used to benefit village projects.
The first village
was Tenganan, on Bali's East side. One of the villagers, Lontoh,
guided us through the ancient town, which is said to have been established as early
as the 6th century. The strict traditions have kept much of it protected from
outside influences.
Everyone lives in
a nearly identical home, which consists of a square masonry walled structure
with 4 areas, the living area on the East side, the kitchen on the South, an
infirmary on the West and a storage area on the North. And in the center court
is a wood post supported structure. This is where the inhabitants are supposed
to take shelter during earthquake activity. The infirmary was used, prior to a
local clinic, for the sick and for infant deliveries.
The village owns
large tracts of forest land around it. Only selected live species can be cut,
on town council approval, and only for ceremonial use and newly weds are
allotted one live tree for their house construction. Marriage to a non Tenganan automatically expels you from the main village and
many of it's privileges. Dead forest wood is collected for firewood and
carpentry and the forest yields a rich crop of wild fruits, herbal medicine and
Macadamia nuts.
The main cottage
industry of Tenganan is Gringsing,
a form of double weaving. This is an ancient art that is only still practiced
in Japan and India. The cotton threads are dyed in four basic colors,
the dye is extracted mostly from forest products. A dark red-brown, a lighter
red-brown, black and a beige color. The patterns are made by covering up the
thread with plastic strips. This painstaking process takes as much as three
years. The majority of the cloth is used as breast shawls for the ceremonial
dancers.
The next stop was
at Sibitang; closer to the North East tip of Bali. It is high up in the mountains. Sibitang
started one of, or possibly the, oldest Salak
plantations, 450 years ago. This is the fruit that I have only seen in Indonesia thus far; though they tell me that it also grows in Thailand. It looks like a small hand grenade or a large fig.
When you peel its skin there are usually three parts, similar to a tulip bulb.
The fruit is delicious. The community of Sibatang
also produces a strong alcohol from the different varieties of Salak.
Sibitung sits on a high ridge with views of Lombok and several other directions from Bali; great hiking opportunities. Mount Tabur is close and one of its eruptions, many years ago, covered Sibitang.
It only took me 50 minutes to ride the 20 odd
kilometers down hill from Ubud to Sanur,
where I met Gin and her other guests. I left in the dark at 6 a.m., figuring that it would take me a lot longer. There
is still a lot of Indonesia that I would have liked to see but my 30 day visa
expired and it's time to push off on Monday the 21st. The voyage from Bitung, Sulawesi, took much longer than I had anticipated.