This is the part of the blog that I've been really wanting to write... I took too many pictures (really, can there ever be too many?!). Seriously... Between the three blog posts, there are about 90 pictures, but I took over 350. So, I think I will follow up the blog posts with a facebook or picasa web album. I'll let you know...
Originally, I had planned for us to spend all of our time at the Eco Lodge, but there was a mix up with the room reservation and we had to find other accommodations for the first night. It all worked out for the best though... The long drive after the flight would have been too much. By the way... I forgot to mention, Bali is a 2 1/2 hour flight from Singapore and it is in the same time zone.
The Eco Lodge has won the WildAsia award for Eco Tourism. They exercise sustainable living practices and help to support the local community. Please read more about it, if you are at all interested. Their work is really impressive.
Sarinbuana Eco Lodge can at any time have as many as 15 guests. There is a restaurant on site where you order your lunch and dinner meals at breakfast. The staff then collect all of the ingredients for your meals from the gardens on site or the local merchants. Everything is local. The food was amazing. Really, truly, amazing!
We arrived at lunch time and we were led by our driver down a long narrow foot path. We were taken directly to our Tree House! The Lodge manager met us there and she showed me where the light switches were and the basics of the house. She then invited us up to the restaurant, after we finished settling in, for lunch.
This is the living room on the first floor.
The spectacular view out the side window.
After we checked out the tree house and were overcome by the amazing views, we realized that we were really hungry. So we headed over to lunch. I read the menu and I started to cry a little. I was really so excited to be there. Way way way excited. Everything on the menu was healthy. Everything was grown organically. There were vegetarian and vegan options for every meal. There was loads of information about how to live more sustainable and why you should eat local. All the things that make my heart happy.
Lunch was fantastic. At this point, it was about 2:30 and we had the rest of the day to explore. In our room was a book with activities that the Lodge could arrange, but they needed a day's notice. So, Scott and I wanted to review that and make a plan. Other than that we just wanted to explore and take in the beauty.
This is Lily, heading to our Tree House from the restaurant.
Beautiful Balinese decor.
The view from our veranda. The tree on the right is a Jack Fruit tree. Most of the trees surrounding us are edible fruit trees. There were Mangosteen, Jack Fruit, Cocoa, Vanilla, Coffee, Snake Skin Fruit, Guava, Durian, I am sure there are others that I am forgetting...
Our Tree House has two floors. This pictures the stairs going up to the second floor. On the first floor, was the living room, 1 bedroom with 2 beds (1 queen and 1 twin) the kitchen and the bathroom. On the second floor was another bedroom (1 queen) and a sitting room. Our plan was to put the 3 kids in the room downstairs and then Scott and I would stay upstairs. I was a little nervous about the stairs being outside, but there wasn't anything I could do about it.
Another view of the downstairs living room.
The twin bed in the downstairs bedroom. There was a door leading out to the garden from this room (on the right of the picture).
Adorable umbrellas hung outside the front door.
The upstairs bedroom.
View from the upstairs sitting room. One thing to note... This window did not close! It was huge, almost the entire wall and it was always open. There was a bamboo blind that could be lowered that really did help with the wind and to keep flying bugs from accidentally coming inside.
Upstairs sitting room.
This is a view from on the stairs looking toward a little covered bale for classes or meditation.
Our garden shower!
The bathroom sink (it's a bamboo faucet!)
Jungle kids on an adventure! We decided to head down to the waterhole. On the website, it says you can swim there. We actually found the water to be much too cold, but we enjoyed the hike.
The path to the waterhole was pretty long and difficult. I'd say the toughest hike my kids have ever done. I was certainly out of breath by the time we returned. It was mostly all stone steps. Scott and Lily counted the steps and it was about 300 stair steps each way.
There are two pools. This is the waterfall into the lower pool.
My Madeline posing by the water.
This is the waterfall into the higher pool. Scott actually was able to make it over to the waterfall pictured here and climb up the wall. He said there is another pool up there and another fall with a difficult path leading up to an even higher pool.
The kids all wanted to soak their feet in the water. It was crystal clear, we could see all the way to the bottom. So pretty!
Madeline next to the rice patty. Off of the path to the waterhole, there is a rice patty that we were able to walk over to and check out. I had never seen rice grow. It was actually quite dry. All of the local people talked about how much they needed rain.
These are the Snake Skin Fruit ready to pick. The proper name is Salak. We ate it several times during our stay and we found it to be delicious. I think it tastes a little like a pear. When we ate it, it was pealed and boiled. It appeared white and was soft and sweet.
The lodge had a fish pond, monkeys, guinea pigs and a rabbit. Every day at 4:30 was feeding time. My kids LOVED helping with the feeding of the animals. Here they are feeding the fish.
A view from our veranda. We had a bamboo wind chime that made a beautiful sound. So peaceful. We brought two different chapter books that I am reading to the kids right now. We enjoyed sitting out side and reading the books and listening to the wind and the animals.
Dinner started at 6:00 and was served until 8:00. We were hungry and a bit tired so we were there right at 6:00. The food was amazing. The kids ate well too. The staff was happy to serve the kids simple foods that they enjoy. We all were able to eat well. After we ate dinner, it was dark. REALLY dark. We walked carefully back to our Tree House to get ready for bed. We didn't think about it before, but we really should have closed the windows before we headed up to dinner. When you turn a light on in the night all of the flying creatures swarm in. It really wasn't too bad and we got the windows closed right away.
Time for showers! We decided to all shower together. It had been a lot of travel and we would all sleep better that way. So, Scott and the kids got in and out and then I hopped in and just when I was all soaped up, the water turned off. Apparently, we had used up our earth friendly allotment of warm water for the day! Oh no! I was really soapy. It was getting in my eyes. UGH!
Scott to my rescue... He filled up a couple of glasses in the kitchen with COLD COLD COLD water and brought them over to dump on my head. It got the soap out, I must admit, but it was cold.
Night time was another adventure all in itself. Have you ever slept a night in the jungle or forest? We were right on the edge of a rain forest. Animals live in the rain forest. Some of them like to be awake at night and make sounds. I don't know what we were listening to, but it definitely wasn't the traffic sounds we are used to. All of the kids felt a little scared and admittedly, I did too. Scott and I got the kids to fall asleep and then we weren't sure what to do. Suddenly, the upstairs bedroom seemed too far away and too open. I decided to climb into bed with Madeline and Scott slept on the couch.
When you don't have curtains and there are a ton of windows, you wake up at sunrise. Especially if you are a little kid that likes to wake up early anyway. The chorus of "the sun is up, it's wake up time!" greeted me much too early. But, I didn't really mind. I was excited about the day and ready to explore our new environment. All of the uneasiness from the night before disappeared with the rising of the sun.
Our plan for Monday was to have breakfast at 8:00 and then go on a hike to a temple starting at 9:00. Scott and I both had massage appointments in the afternoon.
When you wake up at 5:30, breakfast at 8:00 is a little late, but we managed to survive. We helped to feed the animals breakfast and then showed up at the restaurant right at 8:00. We had fresh fruit plates and pancakes with syrup and sugar, hot chocolate and coffee! It was delicious.
We met our guide Ebudina next to the kitchen at 9:00 and headed out on our way.
Ebudina taught us a lot about the local people and the plants in the area. This is a chocolate pod. We got to eat it! She found a ripe one and broke it open. The white pods are covered in a sweet and creamy paste that is chocolate. If you let it dry, it turns brown and then you can break it up into the powder that we are all used to. Amazing! The kids loved it and so did I!
We passed rice fields. Ebudina also told us that there used to be a lot of wild dogs in Bali. They were actually quite a nuisance and they had a serious problem with rabies. About 18 months ago, Bali had every dog on the island killed. Can you imagine! Apparently a lot of people had died after being bitten by a rabid dog. Now they have strict requirements for rabies vaccinations. So sad!
On our hike we passed some men working on building a road. The road was just two cement paths about tire width apart. However, only one side of the road was finished (one path) so only motorcycles could drive there. These men were putting in the cement for the other tire, so a car can go as well. It looked like hard work!
When we reached the temple (our destination) Ebudina took out the required clothes for us to wear. She dressed us and took our picture before we headed up to the temple.
The temple is called Pura Luhur Muncaksari. Inside, there were 3 priests dressed all in white tending the temple for the day. Ebudina brought offerings for us and the priests prayed for us and we got to participate in the Hindu prayer ceremony! We sat on the ground with incense burning and we used the white and red petals from the flowers in our offerings. The priests came over and sprinkled water on us and gave us rice that we then had to put on our face and our neck. They also made bracelet for each of us that had one each of a red, black and white thread. Each color representing a different aspect of the gods. It was really special! Lily and Madeline did great and seemed eager and interested. Wyatt refused to participate. The priests didn't seem to mind, they thought the kids were cute.
The trip back to our lodge went quick. Ebudina carried Wyatt on her back the whole way! We were starving and it was already lunch time when we arrived back. We were all tired, so we lounged and read and played games. Scott and I each had a massage. I think that getting a massage every day is a great idea! We of course fed the animals their dinner too!
By the time evening came, we were a little better prepared for what night would bring. I made sure to close all of the windows before we left for dinner and to bring our flashlight with us for our walk back. Dinner was fantastic. Scott and I shared a bottle of wine. Wonderful! On our walk back, we saw a frog on our path! Scott even picked it up and the kids got to touch it. Showers went much better. We turned the water off when we were soaping up and we did not run out of warm water this time. Whew!
The kids went to bed rather easily. They seemed better adjusted to the sounds of the night and Scott and I were too. We headed upstairs to go to sleep. However, I really only made it for about 1/2 of the night. I woke up to the sound of some wild animal trying to escape its death. It sounded like it was on the path right outside our Tree House. In my imagination, it had to have been two creatures at least 30 or 40 pounds making all that noise. In reality, there was a dead mouse on the path not too far from where we were... I'm not saying that it wasn't 30 or 40 pounds, just that the sound didn't seem to make much of an impression on anybody else.
After being awoken by that, the frogs and other night song animals seemed to get really excited too. Then, I heard something that sounded like thunder. I felt scared and I was convinced that it was a tiger. I have read Wikipedia now that I have returned to Singapore and apparently there have been no tigers seen in Bali since the 1940's. I didn't know that at the time and I'm quite sure you couldn't have convinced me. I woke up Scott and told him that I thought there was a tiger. He didn't think there was one. I was scared for the children, so I really needed to go downstairs and sleep close to them. He was quite comfortable where he was, so he didn't join me. I climbed in bed between Madeline and Wyatt and I felt much better knowing that a tiger wasn't going to get my kids without me fighting it first.
(I'm tired now and heading to bed, I will post about the rest of our adventure in Bali - part 3 tomorrow).
1 comment:
Lions, Tigers, and Bears on My!
This is wonderful, a tree house, the kids will remember this adventure forever!!! So glad you and Scott got to taste the wine.
Arnie
Post a Comment