Showing posts with label Monkeys. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Monkeys. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2009

Beautiful Bali











































Our last minute decision to come to Bali, Indonesia was a great one. It was the perfect way to end our southeast Asia tour, as Bali contains many of the things we love - tropical air, great food, beaches, volcanoes, surfing, nice people, and of course........an abundance of wild monkeys.

We stayed at a Bali styled villa with four bedrooms which came referred to us from our friends Sammy and Annabel (Dreamcatchers). We realized that we didn't really know which island in Indonesia was Bali or where exactly it was located. All we knew is that we were south of Malaysia and Singapore and near the equator. We did find a map of southeast Asia while here and were excited to see just how far south we had flown. Bali is actually 7 degrees south of the equator, directly above Australia. In fact, it is only an hour flight to Derby, Australia. I pointed out to the kids that for the first time in our lives, the sun was actually slightly north of us. We also looked at the southern stars at night, as we knew these were constellations which couldn't be seen back in North America.
Bali is a place that would require months to explore. It has something like 5 or 6 different climates across the island. I met a local named Vicki at the neighborhood gym who said she and her husband have lived here for 4 years and still have not seen everything. They are originally from Australia, but love living in Bali. It is interesting to note that the average monthly temperature only varies by 2 Celsius degrees throughout the year. Because of this, we found most of the Bali style homes to be open with no walls. It took us a few days to get used to being in our living room, sitting on a couch, with a complete and open view of the palm trees and pool outside. We also enjoyed watching the frogs hop into our villa at night, look at us, and then hop back out.
Kristin and I slept in a detached round villa or bungalow with a thatched roof. We loved the outside bathroom which had a shower with no roof. You could watch and hear the exotic birds flying around while you lathered up your hair with some shampoo. Besides the birds, there was a tree nearby that had the brightest pink and purple flowers. I even took a hot shower one morning while it was raining really hard outside, which was an interesting thing to do. Isn't it true that rain water makes your hair softer? Bali was just ending their rainy season, so it only rained on us one night and one morning. It was fun to listen to the thunder outside because it was some of the loudest rolling thunder I have ever heard. It really shook the ground below our bungalow.

We spent a few days exploring some of the beaches. The first beach within walking distance had black sand. The sand was soft but was entirely black with shiny specks, making it beautiful. The beaches all had huge waves which made it great for swimming. These beaches always had a lot happening with dogs and even horses running down the beach. (No, the horses weren't wild and did have people riding them.) On our first day at the beach, we realized we were swimming in the Indian ocean. It's fun to see something that you once memorized in geography class.

We went to the other side of Bali and visited another beach, which had soft white sand and smaller waves. The large waves "broke" about a mile from shore from an outer coral reef which were great to watch. We located this beach as a referral from Vicki and quickly found ourselves in our beach chairs with umbrella about 20 feet from the water. We had so much fun swimming in the ocean and even found some rocks nearby which provided daytime shade.

The island is primarily inhabited by people belonging to the Hindu religion which Kristin and I knew little about. The Hindu's only have 4 options for first names, so you meet a lot of people with the same first name. It is determined by your birth order and it doesn't matter your gender. I asked someone what happens if you have five kids, and he said the 5th child would use the same name as the first born. The Hindu's also worship many gods. They believe in one primary god, but then there are many gods under the primary god. We often saw people placing straw bowls outside their homes and in the streets with food and flowers in them as an offering to the spirits. They believe you try to keep the good spirits happy and the bad spirits happy enough to leave you alone - very interesting. All of the Hindu people treated us great and we found them interesting to converse with. We even had the chance to see an ancient Hindu tribal monkey dance which was very dramatic with 50 men singing, dancing and walking through fire.

We hired a driver one day to take us to the middle of the island to a city called Ubud. The drive was awesome as we saw three distinct volcanoes in the background. We found a monkey sanctuary, which is basically a place where hundreds of monkeys live in the wild. The kids loved seeing and feeding the monkeys. You could see them living in families, swimming in ponds, climbing trees, eating, playing, and even some moms carrying their newborn babies. We realized that monkeys really are like people. There are good monkeys that are fun to play with and there are bad monkeys that growl and like to steal hats and sunglasses.

We decided to go surfing on our last full day in Indonesia. We negotiated with several people on the beach until we found two great instructors, five surfboards and two hours of lessons. Within 5 minutes, we were surprised to see Anna "standing up" on the board, riding a wave into shore. Lexi was was up a few minutes later and then Adam. Surprisingly, we were all up on our boards "catching a wave" within 20 minutes. We all joked about "catching a wave" or "riding the big kahuna" while we hummed the "Hawaii Five O" theme song. It was a blast to see the kids at the end of our lesson, riding their surfboards and doing tricks like jumping off their board and doing a "180" while surfing. Maybe snow and water sports in Utah helped us to pick it up faster. We all agreed it would be fun to come back to Bali in the future for a surfing vacation. The water was so warm and perfect waves came every 45 seconds. I guess that is why Bali is known as one of the surfing capitals of the world.

The morning we left, we had a chance to further visit with John Paul and Danielle who owned the villa. They lived next door in a very nice 2 story Bali style home complete with their own lily pad moat (around the house) and large swimming pool. We enjoyed spending some time with them and the chance to get to know them better. John Paul is a photographer by profession and Danielle runs a successful high end clothing business with several boutique stores. They are from France, but spend 9 months of the year living in Bali.

Bali was a difficult place to leave, especially as we knew our vacation was about over. We were so glad we decided to visit and to explore a small piece of Indonesia. I am glad I was able to share our trip with our friends and family and anyone else who received this blog address. I will try to make one more blog update over the next week with my final thoughts and perhaps a picture or two.

DEAL OF THE WEEK: No doubt about it, it was the surfing lessons. Bali offers some great surfing schools and you can pay $75 an hour....or more. We were able to negotiate lessons for five people, the expertise of two private instructors, and five surf boards for the total cost of $54 US. Our instructors were very patient, easy going, and a lot of fun. The total cost was less than the price of one ski pass to Snowbasin! Of course the food and massages and spa services were also very cheap in Indonesia as in other parts of Asia.

FUNNY STORY OF THE WEEK: It would have been easy to write about the monkey relieving itself on Lexi and Adam, or when I found myself riding a borrowed motorcycle into town dodging flying bats along the way. Instead, I thought I would mention our visit to the beautiful white sand beach on the east side of Bali. This was a private beach near a great restaurant and about a mile from the public beach. After Kristin and I rented our beach chairs (free if you ate lunch at the restaurant), we quickly sat down to rest in our chairs taking in the sun. The kids said they wanted to swim, so they ran into the water to cool down. After a few minutes, Kristin and I noticed that we were suddenly surrounded by Europeans also spending the day at the beach. Well, not sure how many people have ever swam with Europeans, but their culture dictates that it is NOT necessary for the women to wear the top half of their bathing suit. Europeans fully believe that women and men are very equal at the beach. Before we knew it, most of the kids, moms and "grandmas" were sunbathing in a manner that would fully prevent them from getting any tan or sunburn "lines". We told Adam to keep his eyes on the water. Kristin commented how interesting it was as they would continue to play with their kids, swim or eat lunch as if they were fully dressed. No big deal. The group next to us contained about 5 moms and about 12 kids playing the same way you would see a "play group" back home.......with only one exception as Kristin pointed out!

Thursday, February 05, 2009

Southern Thailand - Koh Yao Noi, Krabi and Phuket




































Hello Everyone!

We have been having a much different experience down "south". After flying into Phuket, we hired a driver ( or I should say Kristin negotiated one) to take us to Bang Rong Pier. It was only a 20 minute drive, but the time passed quickly as we spoke to our very friendly Muslim driver. He was extremely nice and even asked us a bit about American politics and current events. We were dropped off at the pier and found a very small village, with one public bathroom, and a small and old wooden pier. There were only 3 or 4 other locals waiting for this longboat taxi which we heard would take us to the island of Koh Yao Noi. (Unfortunately, Adam had the 24 hour stomach flu and was only about 5 hours into his flu bug. Kristin is convinced it was a bad chicken gizzard in Bangkok, but I still hold that it was the flu.) As we were waiting for the boat, a tribe or flock or whatever you call a group of 30 monkeys came running into this village out of the jungle. They were jumping on cars, on rooftops and going through some of the garbage cans looking for food. I saw one take out some fruit and start eating it. They came within five feet of us and I'm sure I could have pet one of those cute monkeys. We will never know because Kristin told me not to.....

Our longboat arrived and we boarded. It took us about an hour to get to our island, but it was one of the most beautiful and memorable boat rides we have ever taken. It was our first view of the Andamen Sea and the majestic limestone mountains jetting out from the ocean all around us. We arrived an hour later to our island and moved our backpacks to a Tuk Tuk driver. We told him to take us to Sabai Corner which was a bungalow we read about in our Frommer's country guide. The ride was interesting as we noticed everyone was Muslim. The women were covered from head to toe, but that didn't stop them from riding their mopeds on the small streets. As in the past, we received many, many smiles and polite stares from those on the side of the streets which made us feel very comfortable. We arrived as it was getting dusk and their was only one "jungle home bungalow" left for rent. It was about $40 and it looked "ok" especially since we didn't have any other options.

The night was eventful. The insects outside were very loud. We had a water buffalo grazing 50 feet in front of our new pad. All of the "beds" had mosquito nets over them. I was bit by my first several mosquitos (rethinking the malaria pill decision now). As we were settling for bed, Kristin saw what looked like a decoration or a book end on the wall. It wasn't a decoration but some kind of colorful tree frog. We weren't sure how to get it out, so we assigned the task to Adam (our animal expert). He started approaching the frog every so slowly, when suddenly (and I mean with lightning speed) it jumped onto his bare chest and stuck. It was so fast that he screamed, jumped and smacked it off him. We soon discovered these tree frogs can jump 8 feet at a time and stick to the walls. To make a long story short, we couldn't get the frog and so I walked down and got the owner to come get it. He covered his hand with a napkin and it took him about 5 minutes to get the frog. Anna was mad at this point and looked at me and said "Why did YOU get us this dumb bungalow???" We finally got everyone in bed and Kristin and I giggled about where we were and how we got here. Everyone made it through the night with actually a good night sleep. Although Lexi had a few spider bites on her leg.....this was days ago and she is ok. :) We rented two mopeds the next day for $6 each and had a great time exploring this island. The food and views were fabulous.

We took a speedboat the next day from the Thakao pier to Krabi. After a longer commute by public bus and private taxi, we arrived at the Aree Tara hotel. It was a more expensive hotel, but only 2 months old and it had a very nice pool. It was a 5 minute walk from the Aonang Beach. We spent the next three nights at the hotel which had also had a great restaurant. We rented our own longboat driver for the day ($50) and he took us snorkeling and beach hopping. We snorkeled at Chicken Island and then found a great beach at Poda Island.

We hired a driver to take us on a 21/2 drive back to Phuket and we arrived at the JW Marriott Vacation Beach Resort. This place was nicer than we ever imagined as it is a five start resort with private beach and 3 of the best and largest swimming pools we have enjoyed. The kids had a chance to eat some hamburger and fries and our room had all the conveniences of home. We made some good friends from Scotland (John and Mary) and from Spain (Malcolm and Ann). We also attended church here in Phuket and there were only five other members who attended. It was on the second floor of a nice hotel and they only held sacrament service. The people were very nice and very glad we came.

Besides lots of beach and pool time, we left once to take a John Gray sea caving tour via kayaks. It was a lot of fun, as we explored numerous islands and limestone caves with a guide in our kayak. Some of the caves required us to lie down as flat as we could to get into the caves. We also entered very dark caves with hundreds of large bats hanging upside down. We had a chance to kayak on our own and swim which was fun. We also learned about the jellyfish species here and found ourselves holding a few in our hand. Another interesting item to see was a cave that had "glow in the dark" plankton in the water. As we swished our hands in the water at night, the water lit up and looked like underwater fireflies. We had never heard of let alone seen anything like this.

I feel like I am leaving out so many things, but these are the highlights. The beach here at the hotel had great smooth sand, a fun under current to play in, beautiful sunsets and yes Mynah birds. Kristin and I fed some wild Mynah birds on our pation this morning and they made some very peculiar sounds. We also celebrated Lexi's 12th birthday here in Phuket with a brownie cheesecake from the hotel bakery. It was fun and I'm sure one of the "warmest" birthdays she will remember.
We are now changing some of our trip plans as we bought airline tickets yesterday to Singapore. While it was not in our plans, the fact that we are so close was just too tempting. We leave in the morning (Friday) at 10 am and will be in Singapore through next Tuesday before we head back to Bangkok. We hope all of our family and friends are well back home!

(In the picture above, Adam is holding some of the items found in the local supermarket in Phuket....chicken feet, octopus, and some kind of angry looking fish with teeth.)