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| View during our stroll |
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| View from Bobby's garden |
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| The side of Bobby's house |
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| Our Bungalow at Bobby's |
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| The porch of our bungalow, complete with hammock chair! |
A narrative of my travels so I don't forget what the heck I did in those really cool places.
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| View during our stroll |
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| View from Bobby's garden |
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| The side of Bobby's house |
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| Our Bungalow at Bobby's |
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| The porch of our bungalow, complete with hammock chair! |
Well, Steve found my phone charger. It was hiding behind a curtain in our place on Gili Trawangan, and thank goodness he has a reflexive habit of tidying up Airbnbs before we leave them. I normally would, too, but was in a funk...due to the missing phone charger. Suddenly everything felt sunny again, and we headed out for breakfast and to book the ferry back to Bali. When we left Padangbai, they explained that we just need to give a half hour of notice to get a ferry, but we found instead that the early fast boat, leaving at 10:30, was already full. So we were looking at two extra hours to kill before the 12:30 and decided to walk over to the west side of the island for breakfast. We ordered pizza and juice, which was a mistake because both were terrible (though it's worth noting that ALL the other juices we've had have been more delicious than I even could imagine. It's just that this one tasted like drinking pureed ginger root), but the location was spectacular. We sat in chairs overlooking Serene Beach and it lived up to its name beautifully.
To get to the beach we walked across the middle of the island rather than the beach route because of time concerns. It was pretty eye opening. We had been talking a lot about how Gili Trawangan was a weird place, a little like Disney World. Everything is happy and fun, but you definitely aren't supposed to look past the veneer. The middle of the island was much more of a reminder that we're in an impoverished place, despite tourist attractions and pricing that might say otherwise. Everywhere we've gone, trash is a real problem. On the beaches that cater to visitors, staff are really attentive to cleaning it up and raking the sand to get it even and clear. On the dirt roads across the island it just sits. The horses that are used to draw carts are left in pastures that are covered with trash, with maybe a small clearing where they can walk on grass and dirt.
We took to calling the strip near the dock where we stayed Wildwood - filled with shops selling overpriced tee shirts, jewelry, food and tchotchkes. A lot less neon, but the same habits of overcharging tourists for crap. If you walked to the center, the same goods cost significantly less and were sold without the beautified shop space.
Anyway, we made it back to the ferry in perfect time and made our triumphant return to Bali. We hired a taxi to drop us off in Ubud for our next stay, only to learn that the house isn't "right outside" Ubud, but is, in fact, a whole different town 10km north. We have slowly been realizing that 10km is more than just an extra few minutes down the road... It's more like an extra 40. Because Ubud is very much the cultural capital of Bali, the tourist season is always going. As such, traffic is a nightmare. Our kind and patient driver took us all the way up to Tagalalang to the rice terrace our Airbnb was located on.
Thus far, the weather has been spectacularly cooperative on our travels. Rain might sprinkle in the afternoon for a minute or two, but the heavy storms have all come at night and the skies have been mostly clear and blue. Totally not what we had been expecting for our trip during the less expensive rainy season. That was not the case during the trip to Tagalalang. The skies absolutely opened up as we reached Ubud, and the roads were so filled with water that everything slowed. It became dangerous for the ubiquitous scooters to drive so they mostly pulled to the side to wait it out, but that still left cars jockying for space on already cramped roadways, made more narrow by the channels of water churning down the street. It was a mess. Our driver handled it like a champ and got us to the rice terrace village, but then seemed a little confused about where to go. The directions on the Airbnb confirmation just said to have our driver call for directions to the house, which he had done, but there was still some confusion. Fortunately the directions mentioned that the place is located next to the Dewi Cafe, and we were able to spot it amidst the downpour. It was a little touch and go for a second there though!
Two guys met us at the bottom of this rain washed hill, one exuberant and one decidedly not. They were expecting us, so that was a definite upside to the driver having called. They ushered us quickly to a rocky set of steps and away we went, trekking up to our house (trek is truly the best verb to describe the trip). We scuttled over rocks and wet leaves and used the stepping stones that were meant to make the walk easy, and 3 minutes later found ourselves on the front porch of a traditional Balinese home. That happened to be built on the rice terrace. After a VERY thorough introduction to the space by the exuberant fellow, we were happy to just sit down and relish the air conditioning that we hadn't expected. It was an exhausting trip.
We managed to shower and get out on the porch to watch the lightning storm over the ride paddies and I was ready for bed despite it being about 6:30. Steve, however, needs more frequent feedings than I do, and doesn't allow sleep to dissuade him from eating. Wayan (the exuberant one) had left us a cell phone to use to call him with questions and concerns, and also to let him know whether we would like to go trekking up the rest of the terrace in the morning. We called to confirm that, and asked him about places to eat dinner. He replied, " but it's raining!" Apparently that was supposed to mean that no one goes out so restaurants and warungs would be closed. He quickly recovered and said he would call us right back. *Click*
So we waited for maybe 4 minutes before he called back to say that the restaurant was closed but don't worry, his uncle would come by soon to get us and make us traditional Balinese food to eat at our place. Considering we didn't have a kitchen, that was a curious explanation. We didn't get a lot more detail though, so we just sat tight and wondered what the hell we had gotten ourselves into.
About a half hour later, Dina knocked on our door. He escorted us back up the hill towards the main road through town and explained that he owns a warung there. It seemed like he opened specifically to feed us! So obviously we felt like total buffoons, causing all these people to have to change plans to feed us, but he and his wife, Ketut, were so so so kind and wonderful that we got over it. They made us Balinese fried chicken and rice and soup and we chatted about Balinese life and they answered all my questions about Hinduism as practiced here and it was amazing. They could not have been kinder. Dinner wrapped up around 9:30, and one of my last questions was what time Balinese eat dinner usually. Apparently that's between 4-6. So they definitely went out of their way to feed us. We apologized for keeping them up, made plans for Dina to take us on a tour the next afternoon and to drive us to our hotel in Denpasar. Back to the house in the dark and rain, and to sleep under the thunderstorm that was still rolling.
I woke up and couldn't find my phone charger. Since my phone has all of our reservations on it, is functioning as our primary camera, and is helping us to stay in touch with Anj for puppy questions, this was disconcerting. I messaged Wayan to ask if he had seen it and then we left the house to check on two shops nearby that sell phone gear. We quickly learned that Google does not sell their products in Indonesia and, in fact, only sells their phones in 8 countries. So we were a little screwed. I was in a funk (despite Steve's reminders that we had redundancies in place for all my phone jobs), but we decided to take advantage of the snorkeling boat trip offered right outside our apartment.
Literally everywhere you walk on Gili Trawangan, there are men attempting to sell you boat trips to go snorkeling. We had been ignoring them (much as you ignore the guys in Central Park selling watches or purses), but the allure of maybe seeing sea turtles and Manta Rays was too big. So for US $10 each, we went on a 4 hour boat trip to sites around the three Gilis.
Very quickly, I began to understand why the trip was so cheap. We were equipped with mask, fins, snorkels, but there were zero safety precautions laid out. We had a driver and a kid who sat on top of the boat spotting for turtles and directing the captain, but there were no directions given the entire day besides "jump, jump!", "in, in!", and "one hour stay here, very romantic" when they dropped us off at a beach side bar on Gili Meno, despite no one knowing that was going to happen. They certainly never instructed folks to be mindful of their fins and not kick the coral, so the reef was in bad shape. There were two upsides to the whole thing. At the second stop on our journey, after telling us to "jump, jump!" we went on a maybe 20 minute snorkel sprint looking for turtles. We saw two! Steve and I, along with one other tourist, kept up with the "divemaster" and didn't realize til later that the reason we didn't see any of our other boat mates was that the driver left the four of us in the water so he could drop someone off who was feeling seasick. So thank goodness we were all keeping up, because there was no boat rescue coming if we had any problems. It was exhausting, but the turtles were amazing. Later when we were dropped at the bar we found out about the woman bring left there to recover during our adventure.
The outing was exhausting. We got back to land around 5pm, went straight to the Airbnb to shower, and accidentally took a 4ish hour nap. We woke up around 9:30pm and got food before heading straight back to bed. It was a long day in the sun, but perfect weather for it!
...was actually spent in the car. We woke up around 4:30 (probably because of the rooster) and Wayan, our host, said we could shoot to take the 11am shuttle instead of the 1pm since we were up early. Needed to leave at 8:30 in case of traffic. Boy was he right about the traffic. We spent 2hrs 45 mins driving to Padangbai, the harbor from which our boat departed. We obviously did not make the 11am, so then we had to either fend off people selling bracelets and sarongs and sunglasses for a few hours while we waited for the 1pm or go to the bar. Can you guess which we chose?
The fast boat to Gili Trawangan was air conditioned and had a terrible/awesome movie playing, Monster Truck. It was about this giant squishy squid monster thing that was living in deep oil wells til industry found it. The oil company caught two of them and were doing tests on them, but a third escaped and befriended a boy. Think ET meets Free Willy and you've got the right idea. Again, amazing. Unfortunately, depending on your perspective, the boat landed before we could find out if the industry-paid scientist who turned to the good guy's side had successfully helped the two captive creatures to escape. Will obviously have to check that one out at home to find out!
We got to Gili Trawangan around 3pm and found our place right away. It's only a 5 minute walk from where the ferry plopped us down on the beach. There aren't motor bikes at all here, you travel by bicycle or horse drawn cart or by foot! We decided to walk to the other side of the island to watch the sunset from the West and it was absolutely breathtaking. We took turns helping other tourist couples take photos so they could both be in them. Let me tell you, drinking a cold Bintang (Indonesian beer) while watching the sun set over a volcanic island is nothing to sneer at.
The downside of watching the sunset on the Western side of the island was that we had to walk back "home" in the dark. Sunday nights are apparently big for partying in the Gilis, so we passed many bars and dance floors that were welcoming patrons. Us, still in bathing suits and smelling of sunscreen weren't the ideal clientele, so we got some weird looks. We managed to navigate the darkness successfully (in fairness, large stretches of the dirt road were lit), and even managed to stay awake past 9pm for the first time this vacation! This Airbnb had blessed, blessed air conditioning, and we were so grateful for it; not only does Gili Trawangan have lots of roosters, but we were only a half block away from the local mosque and the first morning prayer is started with a call to worship that is projected via speakers... At 5am. So the AC helped us to successfully sleep through that (mostly).
This place was every bit as nice as the last one, in an entirely different way. It's beachfront, located above a jewelry shop, and has this amazing balcony overlooking the beach. They left us welcome Bintangs, plus the bathroom was designed as a wet room so I didn't have to worry about traipsing water all over. It was a really lovely space. First day's impression was all good!