Travel stories of a caravan duo, plus a 5th Wheel and Isuzu truck in Europe

Category: General (Page 3 of 37)

GWK and Uluwatu

On arrival in Benoa Port and when you arrive into Bali by plane, the most prominent monument visible on the skyline is known as GWK. Garuda Wisnu Kencana is the correct name for a huge monument built in the grounds of a country park which we visited one hot and humid day.

We boarded a shuttle bus from the car park to the entrance, once through the gates you enter a calming water plaza thats home to a statue of Lakshmi with everyone posing in front of her. Lakshmi in Hindu belief, is the mother of the universe, Goddess of prosperity, happiness and wellbeing and is the Consort of Vishnu the Protector.

We follow a carefully planned path around and next up is a massive statue of Vishna, surrounded by water. Here Graham was inundated by facts from a tour guide who took a liking to him.

Eagle like Garuda is mounted into a hillside, the 18 metre high statue of Vishna’s mount is made of metal and copper, we wound our way through impressive gardens and alleys cut out of colossal limestone pillars, an area used for concerts and events.

Finally we get to the summit and wait in the queue inside to take a guided tour to the 9th floor then the 23rd floor. Its size is unimaginable until you are at the base of the statue then you see how tall it is – its the tallest statue in Indonesia and the 4th tallest in the world!

Taking 4 and a half years to build, starting in July 2014, it originally began as a community project but a company took over the build, using over 1000 workers (with a Zero accident rate) to build this copper plated steel and concrete structure, testing its wind strength in the UK and officially opening in 2019. The information given on the tour was overwhelming, but fascinating if you were an engineer!

You get to see the inside of the structure, all steel frames and panels, and then at the 23rd floor is a viewing platform out through some eye shaped windows, with amazing views over the countryside. There is also aviewing platform at this point that’s glass floored, looking down through the structure to the base at the 9th floor.

We meandered back through the gardens and headed back to the car for a sandwich lunch and to chill in the aircon!

Next stop was a hillside temple at a place called Uluwatu, right on the coast. Records suggest it dates back to the 9th century, built as a sea Temple to protect Balinese people from the negative spirit forces of the ocean. Balinese temples are recognised as sea temples, village or mountain temples, Uluwatu is one of 6 strategically placed temples on the island, offering protection for the southwest coast and is dedicated to Shiva Rudra, the manifestation of Lord Shiva as the god of transformation and dissolution. 

It was far too hot to explore the whole temple grounds, especially as we had to cover our knees in a tasteful mauve nylon skirt so we climbed bits of the external walls before heading back to the air con in the car! However, the monkey kept us entertained and on our toes, all on the lookout for the thieving blighters who take a liking to sunglasses, food, handbag contents and anything they can grab 😀

Festive Days in Bali

The ship docked in Benoa Port, Bali a day and night before we had to actually disembark as some cruise guests were heading straight to the airport; we stayed on board that night, enjoyed a last supper with our dining team, last drinks in the Sunset Bar and checked out leisurely before getting a small coach to our Hotel, our home for the next 2 weeks.

The Hotel is called the Nusa Dua Beach Hotel and appears to be in a “secure resort complex” of several luxury hotels, a shopping centre and medical centre all surrounded by beautifully manicured gardens running up to the beach. Within the complex a taxi anywhere is approximately £2.20 regardless of the number of occupants, a set fee! Brilliant idea.

The beach has a walkway all the way along its 14 kilometres, cutting through the grounds of neighbouring hotels and ending up at a peninsular overlooking an area of sea that’s a surfers paradise, beautiful white sandy beaches, clear aqua blue sea and waves out past the bay.

We have several speciality restaurants on site and an open buffet restaurant, food in the restaurants is good but the buffet isn’t to the standards we had become accustomed to on the ship. Our rooms are traditionally Indonesian, lots of wooden furniture and marble or stone floors, comfortable enough. We have views over a tropical duck pond, that turned into a lake when it rained!

It seems very strange to be in 30c humid temperatures and listening to Carols being sung in Indonesian in a country that doesn’t celebrate Christmas but that’s what has happened. Half the guests in the Hotel were off the cruise ship, so the Hotel has really gone out of its way to help us feel festive.

We had a gala dinner on the night of the 24th December, lots of fresh fish, salads and soups to start. They cooked a whole roast turkey, tried to recreate stuffing (advertised as Bread pudding), cranberry sauce and then a great big BBQ, steak, chicken, fish, prawns etc. They even made mini apple crumbles and an apple strudel with vanilla sauce!

Christmas Day started with Carol singers at 9am breakfast, local children sung for nearly an hour without song sheets and all in perfect harmony and timing.

Again dinner was a veritable feast, lots of good BBQ’d fish and meat, salads and desserts.

During the day we took a walk along the seafront, to the end of our peninsular bay where there is a small Buddist temple, beautiful beaches and coves and perfect breakwater for surfing, so we spent an hour or so watching the surfers. A very chilled day!!

Life On Board Part 2

STATEROOMS

We didn’t choose our rooms, they were allocated to us as soon as we booked, our only requirement was a balcony, so you can imagine our surprise when we found out that we had probably the best rooms on board! Ours is a corner room with an extra large balcony and rear and side views, Diane and Graham’s is just along the corridor with rear views and we are both on the highest deck, apart from the Gold Card Club Class guests who’ve paid a silly fortune for questionable extras – more padded loungers with cushions, canapés at 5pm, better toiletries and a concierge, but smaller rooms and balconies!!

Our rooms are cleaned and replenished twice a day by our friendly Room Attendant Tim who seems to live permanently in our corridor and is always available:) We wondered if he had a buzzer that notified him as soon as we left our room because he kept appearing!

FOOD

Well, where do I start???? Breakfast starts at 7am and finishes 10.30, lunch starts at midday, dinner is from 6pm and 8.15pm for the second sitting in restaurants but self serve restaurants stay open from 7am until 9.30pm when it reduces to snacks, pizzas and burgers all through the night!! Coffee, cakes, ice cream, afternoon tea and small snacks are available somewhere on the ship at any time of day, so you can easily see how the waistline expands on cruises!!!

Lunch times are as well stocked with food as evenings are, cooking stations dish up Chinese, Indian, Malay, American, Roasts, Grilled Meat, Seafood and Fish, Healthy Salads, Soup & Light Bites, Fruit, Desserts and anything else you can think of, some days there is far too much choice!!!

We actually prefer to sit down in one of the restaurants in the evenings, a daily menu offers 5 or 6 starters, 6 to 7 mains and several desserts, there is less choice but we find it easier and nicer. Food is served to the table, its much more leisurely and enjoyable and we always have a laugh with our allocated Waiter Asep (from Bali, with impeccable service manners) and Sommelier Kan (from New Delhi, India).

Our Assistant Waiter is a new recruit called Raymond, this was his first job on a cruise and he was so keen to impress and learn, so I’m sure he has learned a lot from David and Graham, especially about their exact cheese board requirements!!! Cheddar, brie and gorgonzola only, biscuits with butter, seedless grapes and fresh cranberries and a constantly filled glass of Port.

SUNRISES IN PORTS

Most mornings, apart from 3, we rose to different views, some picturesque and green, some misty and very commercial. In our second week, we experienced morning rain most days, sometimes torrential, but it was still between 26 and 30c so humid.

Eventually, we had to disembark, smoothly and orderly, serenaded by a Bali band and waved goodbye by the Captain’s team, it was a sad moment.

We’ve met some lovely people, made new friends, drunk and eaten far too much, learned so much about new cultures, seen different parts of the world, danced a lot and had great fun so our journey ends on a high!

Lombok, Penultimate Stop

Early on another misty Saturday morning we arrived on the island of Lombok, one of the Indonesian islands. It has its own sleeping volcano, Mount Rinjani, and is a real mix of modern (huge glossy shopping malls), lush green rice paddy fields and ramshackle roadside villages reminiscent of the quieter parts of India.

Once again, we negotiate the services of a driver, a quiet lad called Choy. Firstly we head to the main capital Mataram, where we visit the city’s biggest Islamic centre. Again the island is 40% Islamic, 40% Hindu and the rest are a mix of Buddists, Christian and Catholic and they all live happily and respectfully together.

The Islamic building certainly was impressive, huge, symmetrical and so very clean. We didn’t fancy a tour as it meant donning head to toe tunics, not a great idea in 32c heat!

Next we visited a Hindu temple in the grounds of the Water Palace, the gardens were hosting the oddest combination of events – a tattoo competition and a classic/ modified motorbike display 😀. A very odd combination yet so peaceful!

The Mayura Water Palace was built in 1744, this palace included the former king’s family temple, (which is a pilgrimage site for Lombok’s Hindus on 24 December) around a cooling lake, with a pavilion in the middle. It all sounds very idyllic – the lake and the temple were once stunning but these days its a stagnant rubbish filled pond in a park used by locals and the buildings (once revered temples) are overgrown and unkempt. Sadly our guide, with his stories of good and evil and black and white couldn’t convince us that the temples were still in use, far too uncared for……

We stopped at a shopping mall for lunch in Pizza Hut, a huge cool modern place thats at odds with the rest of the town, glossy quiet and clean in a world of ramshackle chaos and mess. We opted for Pizza Hut as the other restaurants were more authentic, Japanese, Chinese, Thai and we really wanted something plain and familiar.

Finally we headed out of town through endless rice fields to a “traditional village” called Sade pronounced “sar-day”. Here we were taken around a living museum, 700 odd people living in houses built traditionally with straw roofs, clay floors (cleaned with cow shit, apparently the ammonia in it works wonders so forget about Flash!!), watched women weaving batik tapestries (Di & I were talked into buying a scarf each) and learned about the Love Tree, where local single men and women meet and where the men have to kidnap their chosen woman before declaring his love for her under said tree… all very old fashioned! Ah yes, and they have cats, chickens, dogs, kids all roaming freely amongst the dirt and chaos….

We headed back to the ship feeling amazed by this island, lush green, friendly, interesting history, and so calm and chilled. If only we had more time here….

Food, Glorious Food!

This post is self explanatory! The food on board the ship has been exemplary and the dessert displays every other night were quite simply “a work of Art” . Every part of the display was edible!!! Be prepared to salivate!

« Older posts Newer posts »