Bali & Lombok Tuttle Travel Pack. Paul Greenway

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Bali & Lombok Tuttle Travel Pack - Paul Greenway Tuttle Travel Guide & Map

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      CONTENTS

       Paradise Beckons

       Bali & Lombok at a Glance

       How to Use This Book

      Chapter 1

       Bali & Lombok’s Best Sights

       1 Tanah Lot Temple

       2 Lake Bratan, Bedugul Highlands

       3 Jimbaran Beach Seafood Dinner

       4 Padangbai Village, East Bali

       5 Ulu Watu Temple, South Bali

       6 Pasir Putih Beach, East Bali

       7 Tirtagangga Water Palace

       8 Cycling on Nusa Lembongan Island

       9 Ubud's Taman Saraswati Dances

       10 Rice Terraces at Jatiluwih

       11 Ubud's Monkey Forest

       12 Gunung Kawi Rock Temples

       13 Banjar Village, North Bali

       14 Mount Batur Natural Hot Springs

       15 From Ujung to Amed, East Bali

       16 Snorkeling Lombok’s Gili Islands

       17 Southern Lombok's Kuta Beach

       18 Lombok's Senaru Village

       19 Pura Lingsar Temple in Lombok

       20 Lombok's Senggigi Beach

       21 Taman Narmada Gardens, Lombok

      Chapter 2

       Exploring Bali & Lombok

       Southern Bali

       Ubud

       Bali’s East Coast

       Bali’s Highlands & North Coast

       The Nusa Islands

       Western Lombok

       Northern Lombok

       Southern Lombok

      Chapter 3

       Author’s Recommendations

       Best Hotels

       Best Food & Restaurants

       Best Shopping

       Best Nightspots

       Best Kid-Friendly Activities

       Best Outdoor Activities

       Best Museums & Galleries

       Best Spas & Retreats

       Best Tours & Classes

       Best Dance Performances

       Best Walks

       Travel Facts

       Index

       Photo Credits

      Bali & Lombok at a Glance

      Geography Located along the southern edge of the Indonesian archipelago, Bali is dominated by a series of cloud-piercing volcanoes along which villages cling to the fertile soil and create amphitheaters of rice fields cascading down the rain-soaked slopes. The tallest, most volatile and, therefore, most revered volcano is Gunung Agung (3,142m/10,308ft). The coast is lined with cliffs, mangroves and beaches, while the Taman Nasional Bali Barat national park protects virgin rainforests in the far west. Lombok is slightly smaller than Bali and with a similar landscape, but dominated by one volcano: Gunung Rinjani (3,726m/12,224ft), the second-highest peak in the country.

      Climate Only a few degrees (and 375km/233 miles) south of the equator, Bali and Lombok are tropical, not monsoonal. There’s a definite wet season (October to March) and dry season (April to September), but it may still rain during the “dry” and not rain for a week in the “wet;” and it usually comes down in short blasts, often late in the afternoon or evening. The mountainous landscapes ensure that precipitation is often localized, so it may, for example, be flooding in Ubud but dry 25km (40 miles) away in Sanur. The weather shouldn’t affect your travel plans, but the peak seasons may (see page 117).

      People Bali’s population of some four million almost doubles every year with tourists. Although a large percentage live in the capital Denpasar, the second-largest city, Singaraja, and the southern tourist areas, most Balinese still follow a lifestyle dominated by village concepts of communal sharing and order. This is most evident in the subak system of shared irrigation for rice fields and the bale banjar meeting hall where societal decisions are made by elders. The indigenous Sasak people of Lombok are Muslims, although some 100,000 of the island’s population of three million are Hindu. People on both islands still prefer to live with their extended families in large compounds, with segregated areas for working, sleeping, and praying, and a small bale pavilion for meeting guests.

      Language Indonesian is the language of instruction in schools and in government, and used extensively by the inhabitants of Bali and Lombok. Most Balinese also proudly speak bahasa Bali, a different, complex language, but the unique script is rarely used. On Lombok, many locals converse in bahasa Sasak, which is an oral, not written, language. English is taught at school and widely used in tourist centers, but a short detour and you may need to use a little Bahasa Indonesia (see page 124).

      Religion It’s impossible to overstate the importance of religion in Balinese life. The form of Hinduism which 92 percent of the island follows was imported from India, via Java, some 1,000 years ago but is now

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