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Saturday, March 7, 2020

Bali (Ubud) - Indonesia - Scar

Bali (Ubud) - Indonesia
07 March – 09 March 2020

Ubud is the perfect foil to the nightlife carnage of Kuta. It’s your serene tonic to the tourist shaken core of the ‘downtown’ area of Bali’s popular visitor hub. Imbued with finest of Balinese qualities, its tropical rainforest & terraced rice paddy fields are dotted with Hindu temples and shrines, setting this location as perhaps the most idyllic, authentic and iconic of locations in Bali. There’s a feel about Ubud, a calmness and an ambience whose atmospheric presence has tones of mystery and tranquillity. It’s uplifting, and that surge of elation has its unique sense of being just in this particular spot. Bali has other places of course, wilder, more chaotic, more hedonistic, but none as enchanting. 

I need to write this entry a little backwards as one of our highlights of the location was the fabulous stay at Villa Naga Putih. Without question, the most phenomenal of property I’ve had the pleasure of staying at. With it tropical jungle setting, a few kms away from the centre of Ubud, its sprawling 2700m2 of space, fashioned across three levels, was almost too much room for the six of us. In fact, it was too much room, so much so that we had to consciously set ourselves the task of visiting other rooms on the property just to fully appreciation and experience the whole. It was epic, there’s no other way of describing it. It’s places like these that quite often prompt you to allow yourself, momentarily, to indulge in atypical notions of partaking in creatively driven lifestyles that could somehow manage to sustain your existence in a place such as this. Like somehow the setting itself could conjure up an untapped quality that could perpetuate your dream state lifestyle. Of course you know it’s absurd, but, you also know that there are people out there that have managed to do it. It’s nice to dream…and you only need to live in just one of the many dreams you have to consider yourself as a success as an ‘alternative’.

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia


Our exit out of Seminyak earlier that day took brought us to Tegenungan Waterfall as the first order of business. A nice enough location just outside of the town of Tegenungan Kemenuh village in Gianyar, some 10kms south of Ubud. It was a suggestion provided by Komang, and a reasonable one at that, but in all honesty, its more than difficult for both Inga and I to fully appreciate the beauty of a waterfall these days. Without question our frame of reference, against which we compare any waterfall we see, is the mighty Iguazu Falls on the Argentine/Brazilian border. Everything simply pales by comparison. A pleasant enough stop of course but not nearly postcard worthy. Almost not photo worthy, but not doing some would seem unnecessarily supercilious and slightly conceited on our part.

Tegenungan Waterfall - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegenungan Waterfall - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegenungan Waterfall - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

We had lunch at the Dirty Duck Diner in Ubud. Not nearly as seedy and unsanitary as it sounds, in fact, quite the introduction or re-introduction to Ubud. Sitting in open air dining pavilions amongst luscious greenery that typifies the surrounds here, ordering anything but the speciality, the Balinese crispy fried duck, would be an absolute travesty. And whilst the food was fairly good, for me the highlight was simply the restaurant surrounds. Beautiful, captivating, divine. This was what I wanted from Ubud. Calmness in a tranquil sea of green.

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Dirty Duck Diner - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Later that afternoon we headed of to one of the now many places that offer ‘sky high’ swings that allow you to soar high above the exquisite natural jungle & terraced rice fields settings. Set on platforms positions on terraced hillsides you get the opportunity to sail out into the open air, allowing you to take in majestic views and set yourself up for some more than instagrammable photos. The swings themselves have a harness which you’re required to strap yourself into but that doesn’t really diminish from the thrill of flying out over the valley on a wooden plank tied to rope! It’s pretty damn cool! 

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Tegalalang rice terrace swing - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

The next day, our penultimate day on this short excursion, involved a massage for the girls, a bit of a walk around Ubud centre and then a wonderful late afternoon, early evening dinner at the Bridges Bali restaurant. My brother-in-law managed to chose this place from a myriad of online recommendations, and I have to say, he hit the nail on the head. For atmosphere, scenery and service, this place was impeccable. It’s one of those places that I’d be happy to stay at for hours, getting intoxicated from the tropical perfumes, ambience and my choice of concoctions from the bar. Simply exquisite and far too short of an experience for my liking. Alas, when you have a place like Villa Naga Putih to return to for the evening then complaining is simply not allowed. 

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Naga Putih - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

Bridges Restaurant - Ubud - Bali - Indonesia

That my friends was it however. 

The next day Inga and I left mid-morning and jumped a flight back to Melbourne. Several weeks later COVID-19 had forced itself into our psyche, had changed our way of live and blunted nearly everything else that we took for granted. For the majority of us 2020 is going to have a gigantic asterisk next to its name. We were forced to adapt and morph into introverted hobbits – peering out of our apartment windows, watching the days take place in front of our eyes without ever truly being part of it. Life will get back to normal, or, some form of normal relatively soon, but the scar that COVID-19 will leave is something that will be visible for a few years to come.

Wednesday, March 4, 2020

Bali (Seminyak) - Indonesia - Before the deluge

Bali (Seminyak) - Indonesia

04 March – 07 March 2020

If somehow the memories I have of our Bali trip managed to travel forward at the speed of light until now, then by comparison, I think I may have aged dramatically, if not physically, then without question, psychologically. In the same manner that Einstein’s theory of special relativity predicts that the person ‘left behind on earth’ would age significantly when compared with the person flying into the future, aka (space), on their anti-age defying machine of light speed.

Truthfully, the nine months from March until now have felt like five years in the age of our COVID-19 ravaged reality.

These days, as I peer out of our apartment window, looking down onto Flinders St, I find it completely empty, bar for the occasional Uber eats cyclist or an emergency service vehicle on its way to another crisis. This is the end-of-days scenario that we use to admonish ‘Doomsday Preppers’ for anticipating. In its early days collectively we all thought that just like any other melodrama that  has emerged via our pixelated idiot boxes, that the Novel Coronavirus would somehow disappear in the manner of SARS, MERS or Ebola. I think part of the contempt initially was that somehow we were immune to any sizeable global catastrophe. Bad things, global troubles, were only ‘real’ and identifiable in the guise of the tangible,  things such as armed conflict, terrorism, natural disasters. As the now emeritus Donald J Trump said in this oft repeated snippet,You know in theory when it gets a little warmer it miraculously goes away. Going on further, and to reiterate my initial point on how long the decade of 2020 feels, he goes on to say,We only have 11 cases and they’re all getting better’…. that was on February 10th, 2020….

…Roll forward to 10 December 2020, exactly 10 months later and the US Coronavirus statistics read like this;

  • 15.2 million cases
  • 286,000 deaths
  • 200,000 + cases per day

Aside from the sheer stupidity and ignominy of a leader making such bombastic comments, the numbers offer more to the reality than our collectively conflated denial back in the day was willing to grasp.

On our way to Bali - Melbourne - Australia

Now even Aiden can say, 'I've been to Bali too'  - Melbourne - Australia

Our last family trip before the COVID tsunami hit us


Before the deluge, the onset of the pandemic that halted economies, travel, social life and much of everything that has modern day humans we had taken for granted, we'd planned a getaway to the island paradise located to our north-west. A getaway not just for this Australian trio, but also, for Inga's family who would be meeting us  in Bali before returning with us to Melbourne in order to have their first experience of the Great Southern Land.

Inga and I were making our first visit to Bali after a four-year hiatus. In that time we had circled the globe a few times, gotten engaged, then married, relocated to Australia and had our first and only child to date, Aiden. When you summarise it all in just a few lines like that it makes you realise that a hell of a lot occurred in that time-frame.

Villa Gupta - Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Gupta - Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Gupta - Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Villa Gupta - Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Kudeta - restaurant and beachclub - Villa Gupta - Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Semiyak - Bali - Indonesia

Generally the Australian perception of Bali is that it’s that locations where bogans go to have their international holiday. Giving  them the ability to say  that they’ve been overseas. Famously epitomized in the Redgum song I’ve been to Bali too, the lyrics, ‘Bali T-shirts, magic mushrooms, Redgum bootlegs, I’ve been to Bali too’ inevitably the images that many of us conjure when we think of those other Australians making their way to the island. And sure, there is some of that style to be expected of Australians in Bali, especially in Kuta, but Bali can, and does offer so much more. I can say from personal experience that I(we) have only scratched the surface of both the beauty of the people, their land, and all that it has to offer. So in that sense I’m not ashamed to say that not only have I been to Bali too, but, I plan on returning a number of times in the future.

Rock Bar - AYANA Resort - Jimbaran - Bali - Indonesia

Rock Bar - AYANA Resort - Jimbaran - Bali - Indonesia

Rock Bar - AYANA Resort - Jimbaran - Bali - Indonesia

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Flying into Denpasar on a typically balmy Bali evening, we were met by Komang, our driver and guide from four years earlier. A friendly, genuine and somewhat understated individual, he typified to me a lot of what the people here seem have within the fabric of their DNA. Not anything brash, or overt, but a sincerity and openness that is not manufactured for a purpose. Once again, we had asked him to be our guide for the next few days once again, this time playing host a slightly extended family audience.

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Balinese Temple - Tanah Lot - Bali - Indonesia

Bali - Indoia

On this occasion we had rented out Villa Gupta for our time in Central Seminyak. A tranquil, gorgeous, three -bedroom abode where we would spend our time between our comings and goings. A truly great place, perfect a bigger group like our and in all honesty, much better value than having to book three different rooms in a hotel or a resort.

Nusa Dua Beach - Bali - Indonesia

Nusa Dua Beach - Bali - Indonesia

OMNIA Dayclub - Kabupaten Badung - Bali - Indonesia

OMNIA Dayclub - Kabupaten Badung - Bali - Indonesia

OMNIA Dayclub - Kabupaten Badung - Bali - Indonesia

For the next couple of days we spent most of our time either in Seminyak or on the most southern coastline of Bali. In this regard, there wasn’t an overwhelming urge to undertake mass sightseeing but we did all get an idea of the key elements that make this island such an overwhelming favourite for so many people.

OMNIA Dayclub - Kabupaten Badung - Bali - Indonesia

Hard Rock Cafe - Kuta - Bali - Indonesia

Hard Rock Cafe - Kuta - Bali - Indonesia

Being from Australia, this part of the world is relatively familiar to me, in the sense that it’s proximity gives you a sense of awareness for it. Coming from Latvia on the other hand must feel like your stepping into a totally different universe. A paradise that inspires a tropical state of mind. Coming from a land where the average annual air temperature is just +5.9 degrees, Bali must truly be a tropical splendour.