Day 1:
We began the tour traveling from Kuta (West Coast) through the center of the island to Lovina, at the Northern tip of the island. The roads run through endless small towns and villages, winding their way up, down and through mountain valleys. We visited 2 temples, a huge waterfall, a coffee plantation and fed monkeys on the side of the road.
Entry Gate to Tanah Lot |
Tanah Lot Temple |
The monkeys were surprisingly gentle |
Awwww... |
At the plantation we had a tasting of numerous Bali coffee and tea, including "Kopi Luwak" coffee. This is the world's most expensive coffee as the beans are harvested from the droppings of Luwaks. That's right, these little animals eat the coffee berry, it ferments in their belly for a few days (or weeks...??) and then is returned to the forest floor. The droppings are collected, cleaned, and then the beans ground into this amazing and expensive coffee. It is actually really delicious coffee...very smooth. :)
Roasting coffee beans |
The BEST smell! |
Grinding the beans |
And sifting |
The white cup on the right is the Luwak "Pooh" Coffee, around $4.50/cup |
Black sand beach at Lovina |
We left Lovina, traveling down the east coast to the village of Amed. Amed is a narrow fishing village built along the coast where the mountain meets the ocean. Along the way, we drove up to Penginapan Volcano. Unfortunately, it was very cloudy and photo ops were limited. We had the most scenic drive down and once we were below the cloud line, there were rice paddies as far as you could see. We also stopped to visit the Royal Water Palace and the Pura Ulun Danu Batur temple. The last stop was a natural hot spring shower/pool (not very refreshing after touring around in the 30+ heat all day....). At the end of the day we found accommodation at a small guest-stay with an amazing view. Aside from the power outage and loss of our cooling system (a fan), and endless entanglement in the mosquito net, it was the most peaceful stay we've had in 4 months.
Beautiful Rice Paddy fields |
Natural Hot Springs |
Royal Water Palace at Tirtagangga |
Nothing like morning coffee with a view like this |
We woke up to a gorgeous day with a thermos of coffee waiting for us on our veranda. Had we not had another day of touring ahead, we may have been convinced to stay. But onward to Ubud! We had a light itinerary planned for day 3...thankfully, I'm not sure we could have pretended to be excited to visit another temple or palace or historic site. So, we grinned and bear-ed it through a tour of a wood carving operation and yet another temple.
Hand carving wood sculpture from Hibiscus wood |
The ladies do the sanding and finishing work |
Puto (our guide) and I at Candidasa |
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